Institute of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Cognitive Psychology Unit, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Department of Biology, Animal Ecology Research Group, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Am J Primatol. 2020 Jul;82(7):e23138. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23138. Epub 2020 Apr 24.
Primates show various forms of behavioral contagion that are stronger between kin and friends. As a result, behavioral contagion is thought to promote group coordination, social cohesion, and possibly state matching. Aside from contagious yawning, little is known about the contagious effect of other behaviors. Scratching is commonly observed during arousal and as such may play a role within group dynamics. While the Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) is commonly considered the least social great ape, orangutans do engage in social interactions. Therefore, their social organization makes them a suitable case for studying the social function of behavioral contagion. Through behavioral observations of captive orangutans, we recorded all yawn and scratch events together with the corresponding behavior of all bystander group-members. As yawning was rarely observed, no conclusions could be drawn regarding this behavior. Scratching was contagious and occurred within 90 s after the triggering scratch. Specifically, orangutans showed increased scratch contagion when they had seen a weakly bonded individual scratch during tense contexts. When the orangutan had not seen the triggering scratch, the contagiousness of scratching was not affected by context or relationship quality. Our results indicate that behavioral contagion is not simply higher between individuals with stronger social relationships, but that the contagiousness of behaviors may vary based on the context and on social factors. We discuss these findings in light of an adaptive function that may reduce aggression.
灵长类动物表现出各种形式的行为传染,这种传染在亲缘关系和朋友之间更为强烈。因此,行为传染被认为可以促进群体协调、社会凝聚力,并且可能还可以促进状态匹配。除了传染性打哈欠外,对于其他行为的传染效应知之甚少。抓挠在觉醒时很常见,因此可能在群体动态中发挥作用。尽管婆罗洲猩猩(Pongo pygmaeus)通常被认为是社会性最低的大型类人猿,但猩猩确实会进行社交互动。因此,它们的社会组织使其成为研究行为传染的社会功能的合适案例。通过对圈养猩猩的行为观察,我们记录了所有打哈欠和抓挠事件,以及所有旁观者的相应行为。由于很少观察到打哈欠,因此无法对此行为得出结论。抓挠具有传染性,并且在触发抓挠后的 90 秒内发生。具体来说,当猩猩在紧张的情况下看到关系较弱的个体抓挠时,抓挠的传染性就会增加。当猩猩没有看到触发抓挠时,抓挠的传染性不会受到环境或关系质量的影响。我们的结果表明,行为传染不仅仅是在关系更紧密的个体之间更高,而是行为的传染性可能会根据环境和社会因素而变化。我们根据可能减少攻击性的适应功能讨论了这些发现。