Language and Intelligence Section, Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Aichi, 484-8506, Japan.
Primate Models for Behavioural Evolution Lab, Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX2 6PN, UK.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2019 Aug;94(4):1502-1529. doi: 10.1111/brv.12512. Epub 2019 Apr 4.
For the past two centuries, non-human primates have been reported to inspect, protect, retrieve, carry or drag the dead bodies of their conspecifics and, for nearly the same amount of time, sparse scientific attention has been paid to such behaviours. Given that there exists a considerable gap in the fossil and archaeological record concerning how early hominins might have interacted with their dead, extant primates may provide valuable insight into how and in which contexts thanatological behaviours would have occurred. First, we outline a comprehensive history of comparative thanatology in non-human primates, from the earliest accounts to the present, uncovering the interpretations of previous researchers and their contributions to the field of primate thanatology. Many of the typical behavioural patterns towards the dead seen in the past are consistent with those observed today. Second, we review recent evidence of thanatological responses and organise it into distinct terminologies: direct interactions (physical contact with the corpse) and secondary interactions (guarding the corpse, vigils and visitations). Third, we provide a critical evaluation regarding the form and function of the behavioural and emotional aspects of these responses towards infants and adults, also comparing them with non-conspecifics. We suggest that thanatological interactions: promote a faster re-categorisation from living to dead, decrease costly vigilant/caregiving behaviours, are crucial to the management of grieving responses, update position in the group's hierarchy, and accelerate the formation of new social bonds. Fourth, we propose an integrated model of Life-Death Awareness, whereupon neural circuitry dedicated towards detecting life, i.e. the agency system (animate agency, intentional agency, mentalistic agency) works with a corresponding system that interacts with it on a decision-making level (animate/inanimate distinction, living/dead discrimination, death awareness). Theoretically, both systems are governed by specific cognitive mechanisms (perceptual categories, associative concepts and high-order reasoning, respectively). Fifth, we present an evolutionary timeline from rudimentary thanatological responses likely occurring in earlier non-human primates during the Eocene to the more elaborate mortuary practices attributed to genus Homo throughout the Pleistocene. Finally, we discuss the importance of detailed reports on primate thanatology and propose several empirical avenues to shed further light on this topic. This review expands and builds upon previous attempts to evaluate the body of knowledge on this subject, providing an integrative perspective and bringing together different fields of research to detail the evolutionary, sensory/cognitive, developmental and historical/archaeological aspects of primate thanatology. Considering all these findings and given their cognitive abilities, we argue that non-human primates are capable of an implicit awareness of death.
在过去的两个世纪里,人们已经报告了非人类灵长类动物会检查、保护、取回、携带或拖着同类的尸体,而几乎在同样长的时间里,科学界对这些行为的关注却很少。鉴于在早期人类如何与死者互动方面,化石和考古记录存在相当大的差距,现存的灵长类动物可能为我们提供了宝贵的见解,了解在哪些情况下以及在哪些情况下会发生丧葬行为。首先,我们概述了非人类灵长类动物比较丧葬学的全面历史,从最早的描述到现在,揭示了以前研究人员的解释及其对灵长类动物丧葬学领域的贡献。过去看到的许多针对死者的典型行为模式与今天观察到的模式一致。其次,我们回顾了最近关于丧葬反应的证据,并将其组织成不同的术语:直接相互作用(与尸体的身体接触)和二次相互作用(保护尸体、守灵和探访)。第三,我们对这些针对婴儿和成人的行为和情绪方面的反应的形式和功能进行了批判性评估,并将其与非同类进行了比较。我们认为,丧葬反应:促进从生存到死亡的更快重新分类,减少昂贵的警惕/照顾行为,对管理悲伤反应至关重要,更新群体等级制度中的位置,并加速新的社会联系的形成。第四,我们提出了一个生命-死亡意识的综合模型,在这个模型中,专门用于检测生命的神经回路,即机构系统(有生命的机构、有意图的机构、心理主义机构)与一个相应的系统相互作用,这个系统在决策层面上与它相互作用(有生命/无生命的区别,生存/死亡的区别,死亡意识)。理论上,这两个系统都由特定的认知机制(感知类别、联想概念和高级推理,分别)来控制。第五,我们从始新世时期可能发生在早期非人类灵长类动物身上的基本丧葬反应到整个更新世时期归因于人属的更复杂的丧葬习俗,提出了一个进化时间线。最后,我们讨论了详细报告灵长类动物丧葬学的重要性,并提出了一些实证途径,以进一步阐明这一主题。本综述扩展并建立在以前试图评估这一主题知识体系的基础上,提供了一个综合的视角,并将不同的研究领域结合起来,详细阐述了灵长类动物丧葬学的进化、感官/认知、发展和历史/考古方面。考虑到所有这些发现,以及它们的认知能力,我们认为非人类灵长类动物能够对死亡有隐含的认识。