Suppr超能文献

打破会话规则对圈养大猩猩很重要:一个回放实验。

Breaking conversational rules matters to captive gorillas: A playback experiment.

机构信息

Univ Rennes, Normandie Univ, CNRS, EthoS (Éthologie animale et humaine) - UMR 6552, F-35000, Rennes, France.

Université de Lyon/Saint-Etienne, CNRS, Equipe Neuro-Ethologie Sensorielle, ENES/CRNL, UMR5292, INSERM UMR_S 1028, Saint-Etienne, France.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2020 Apr 24;10(1):6947. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-63923-7.

Abstract

Across human cultures, conversations are regulated by temporal and social rules. The universality of conversational rules suggests possible biological bases and encourages comparisons with the communicative interactions of nonhuman animals. Unexpectedly, few studies have focused on other great apes despite evidence of proto-conversational rules in monkeys, thus preventing researchers from drawing conclusions on potential evolutionary origins of this behaviour. A previous study showed however that western lowland gorillas engage in soft call interactions that seem temporally- and socially-ruled. Indeed, interactions occurred mainly between individuals close in age who followed a preset response delay, thus preventing call overlap. Here, we experimentally investigated the presence of these rules in a captive gorilla group, using a violation-of-expectation paradigm. Head orientation responses suggest that the respect of response delay matters to subjects, but the importance of the interlocutors' age proximity appeared less clear. The intensity of the response varied with subjects' age in a context-dependent way, supporting a possible role of learning. Our findings support the growing number of studies highlighting the importance of vocal turn-taking in animals and a possible sociogenesis of this ability. The capacity to "converse" might have been a key step in the co-evolution of communication and complex sociality.

摘要

在人类文化中,对话受到时间和社会规则的约束。对话规则的普遍性表明其可能具有生物学基础,并鼓励人们将其与非人类动物的交际互动进行比较。然而,令人惊讶的是,尽管猴子表现出了原始对话规则的证据,但很少有研究关注其他大型猿类,这使得研究人员无法得出这种行为潜在进化起源的结论。然而,之前的一项研究表明,西部低地大猩猩会进行软性叫声互动,这些互动似乎受到时间和社会规则的约束。事实上,这些互动主要发生在年龄相近的个体之间,它们遵循预设的反应延迟,从而防止叫声重叠。在这里,我们使用违反预期范式,在一个圈养大猩猩群体中实验性地研究了这些规则的存在。头部朝向反应表明,遵守反应延迟对被试很重要,但对话者年龄相近的重要性似乎不太明确。在依赖上下文的情况下,反应的强度随着被试的年龄而变化,这支持了学习的可能作用。我们的发现支持了越来越多的研究,这些研究强调了动物中声音轮流的重要性以及这种能力的可能社会起源。“对话”的能力可能是沟通和复杂社会性共同进化的关键一步。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/80cd/7181860/e1315437d3d1/41598_2020_63923_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验