Schweinfurth Manon K, Taborsky Michael
Department of Behavioural Ecology, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern.
J Comp Psychol. 2018 May;132(2):119-129. doi: 10.1037/com0000102. Epub 2018 Mar 12.
Reciprocal cooperation has been observed in a wide range of taxa, but the proximate mechanisms underlying the exchange of help are yet unclear. Norway rats reciprocate help received from partners in an iterated Prisoner's Dilemma game. For donors, this involves accepting own costs to the benefit of a partner, without obtaining immediate benefits in return. We studied whether such altruistic acts are conditional on the communication of the recipient's need. Our results show that in a 2-player mutual food-provisioning task, prospective recipients show a behavioral cascade reflecting increasing intensity. First, prospective receivers reach out for the food themselves, then they emit ultrasonic calls toward their partner, before finally showing noisy attention-grabbing behaviors. Food-deprived individuals communicate need more intensively than satiated ones. In return, donors provide help corresponding to the intensity of the recipients' communication. This indicates that rats communicate their need, which changes the helping propensity of potential donors. Communication of need and corresponding adjustment of cooperation may be a widespread proximate mechanism explaining the mutual exchange of services between animals. (PsycINFO Database Record
互惠合作在广泛的分类群中都有观察到,但帮助交换背后的直接机制尚不清楚。在重复囚徒困境博弈中,挪威大鼠会回报从伙伴那里得到的帮助。对于捐赠者来说,这涉及到为了伙伴的利益接受自身的代价,而没有立即获得回报。我们研究了这种利他行为是否取决于接受者需求的传达。我们的结果表明,在一个两人相互提供食物的任务中,潜在接受者会表现出一种行为级联,反映出强度的增加。首先,潜在接受者自己伸手去拿食物,然后他们向伙伴发出超声波叫声,最后才表现出喧闹的吸引注意力的行为。食物匮乏的个体比饱腹的个体更强烈地传达需求。作为回报,捐赠者会根据接受者沟通的强度提供帮助。这表明大鼠会传达它们的需求,这会改变潜在捐赠者的帮助倾向。需求的传达和合作的相应调整可能是一种广泛存在的直接机制,解释了动物之间服务的相互交换。(PsycINFO数据库记录)