Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zürich, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland; Kalahari Meerkat Project, Kuruman River Reserve, Northern Cape, South Africa.
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zürich, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland; Kalahari Meerkat Project, Kuruman River Reserve, Northern Cape, South Africa.
Curr Biol. 2018 Nov 19;28(22):3661-3666.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.09.065. Epub 2018 Nov 8.
Coordination is a fundamental aspect of social living, underlying processes ranging from the maintenance of group cohesion to the avoidance of competition. Coordination can manifest as synchronization, where individuals perform the same action at the same time but can also take the form of anti-synchronization or turn-taking. Turn-taking has mainly been studied in the context of the development of language [1] due to the fact that it is a universal feature in all languages and has been found to appear early in infancy [2, 3]. Recently, turn-taking has received attention in animal communication research [4-7] as a potential foundation on which social communication was formed [1, 3]. In this study, we describe turn-taking in group-wide vocal interactions of meerkats (Suricata suricatta) during low-conflict sunning behavior, which is accompanied by the production of specific "sunning calls." We show that sunning-call production is socially stimulated and that at the group level, meerkats avoid overlap, thus fulfilling a key principle of turn-taking [8]. Through observational data and playback experiments, we show that these group-level patterns arise from two individual-level rules: call inhibition over short timescales, which prevents mutual interference, and call excitation over longer timescales, which stimulates further group calling. These simple rules suggest that hierarchy formation and turn allocation are not required for achieving group-wide coordination of communication. We also suggest that the potential bonding function of turn-taking shown in humans might have similar effects in animal interactions. VIDEO ABSTRACT.
协调是社会生活的一个基本方面,它是从维持群体凝聚力到避免竞争等过程的基础。协调可以表现为同步,即个体同时进行相同的动作,也可以表现为反同步或轮流。轮流主要是在语言发展的背景下进行研究的[1],因为它是所有语言的普遍特征,并且在婴儿早期就被发现了[2,3]。最近,轮流在动物交流研究中受到关注[4-7],因为它是社会交流形成的潜在基础[1,3]。在这项研究中,我们描述了猫鼬(Suricata suricatta)在低冲突晒太阳行为中的群体范围的发声互动中的轮流现象,这种互动伴随着特定的“晒太阳叫声”的产生。我们表明,晒太阳叫声的产生是受到社会刺激的,并且在群体层面上,猫鼬避免重叠,从而满足了轮流的一个关键原则[8]。通过观察数据和播放实验,我们表明这些群体水平的模式源自两个个体水平的规则:短时间尺度上的呼叫抑制,防止相互干扰,以及长时间尺度上的呼叫激发,这刺激了进一步的群体呼叫。这些简单的规则表明,不需要形成等级制度和轮流分配就可以实现沟通的群体协调。我们还表明,人类轮流所展示的潜在结合功能可能对动物互动产生类似的影响。视频摘要。