Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center, Kellnerweg 4, Göttingen, Niedersachsen 37077, Germany.
Department of Primate Cognition, Georg August University Göttingen, Göttingen, Niedersachsen, Germany.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2020 Jan 6;375(1789):20190045. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0045. Epub 2019 Nov 18.
The extent to which vocal learning can be found in nonhuman primates is key to reconstructing the evolution of speech. Regarding the adjustment of vocal output in relation to auditory experience (vocal production learning in the narrow sense), effects on the ontogenetic trajectory of vocal development as well as adjustment to group-specific call features have been found. Yet, a comparison of the vocalizations of different primate genera revealed striking similarities in the structure of calls and repertoires in different species of the same genus, indicating that the structure of nonhuman primate vocalizations is highly conserved. Thus, modifications in relation to experience only appear to be possible within relatively tight species-specific constraints. By contrast, comprehension learning may be extremely rapid and open-ended. In conjunction, these findings corroborate the idea of an ancestral independence of vocal production and auditory comprehension learning. To overcome the futile debate about whether or not vocal production learning can be found in nonhuman primates, we suggest putting the focus on the different mechanisms that may mediate the adjustment of vocal output in response to experience; these mechanisms may include auditory facilitation and learning from success. This article is part of the theme issue 'What can animal communication teach us about human language?'
非人类灵长类动物的发声学习程度是重建语言进化的关键。关于发声输出与听觉经验的关系(狭义上的发声产生学习),已经发现了对个体发育轨迹的影响,以及对特定群体特征的发声调整。然而,对不同灵长类属的发声进行比较,揭示了同一属的不同物种的叫声和叫声模式在结构上存在惊人的相似性,这表明非人类灵长类动物的发声结构高度保守。因此,与经验相关的改变似乎只可能在相对严格的物种特定限制内进行。相比之下,理解学习可能是极其迅速和无限制的。这些发现共同证明了发声产生和听觉理解学习具有祖先独立性的观点。为了克服关于非人类灵长类动物是否可以进行发声产生学习的无谓争论,我们建议将重点放在可能介导发声输出响应经验调整的不同机制上;这些机制可能包括听觉促进和成功学习。本文是主题为“动物交流能教会我们什么关于人类语言?”的一部分。