Prior Nora H
Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States.
Front Psychol. 2020 Aug 4;11:1370. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01370. eCollection 2020.
Our understanding of the behavioral and physiological mechanisms of monogamy largely comes from studies of behavioral interactions unique to pair-bonded individuals. By focusing on these highly marked behaviors, a remarkable conservation in the mechanisms underlying pair bonding has been revealed; however, we continue to know very little about the range of behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms that could explain the great diversity of pair-bonding phenotypes that exists both within and across species. In order to capture the dynamic nature of bonds over time and across contexts, we need specific, operationally-defined behavioral variables relevant across such a diversity of scenarios. Additionally, we need to be able to situate these behavioral variables within broader frameworks that allow us to interpret and compare patterns seen across species. Here I review what is known about behavioral synchrony with respect to pair bonding and discuss using synchrony as such a variable as well as a framework to expand on our understanding of pair bonding across timescales, contexts and species. First, I discuss the importance of behavioral synchrony and parental coordination for reproductive success in monogamous biparental bird species. Second, I highlight research documenting the critical importance of interpersonal coordination for human social relationships. Finally, I present recent work that experimentally bridges these lines of research by quantifying moment-to-moment behavioral synchrony during brief social interactions in zebra finch dyads. All together, these distinct perspectives support the notion that synchrony (1) is a shared premise for sociality across species, (2) is deeply shaped by social experiences, and (3) exists across timescales, behaviors, and levels of physiology. Conceptualizing pair bonding through the framework of behavioral synchrony is likely to facilitate a deeper understanding of the nuances of how social experiences and interactions impact the brain and behavior.
我们对一夫一妻制的行为和生理机制的理解很大程度上来自于对成对结合个体所特有的行为互动的研究。通过关注这些高度显著的行为,已揭示出成对结合背后机制的显著保守性;然而,对于能够解释物种内部和物种之间存在的成对结合表型的巨大多样性的行为和神经生物学机制的范围,我们仍然知之甚少。为了捕捉关系随时间和情境的动态本质,我们需要在如此多样的场景中都相关的特定的、操作上定义的行为变量。此外,我们需要能够将这些行为变量置于更广泛的框架中,以便我们能够解释和比较跨物种观察到的模式。在此,我回顾关于成对结合方面行为同步性的已知内容,并讨论将同步性用作这样一个变量以及一个框架,以扩展我们对跨时间尺度、情境和物种的成对结合的理解。首先,我讨论行为同步性和亲子协调性对于一夫一妻制双亲鸟类物种繁殖成功的重要性。其次,我强调记录人际协调性对人类社会关系至关重要性的研究。最后,我展示最近的工作,该工作通过量化斑胸草雀二元组短暂社交互动期间的瞬间行为同步性,以实验方式连接了这些研究方向。总之,这些不同的观点支持这样一种观点,即同步性(1)是跨物种社会性共享的前提,(2)深受社会经历的影响,并且(3)存在于各个时间尺度、行为和生理水平。通过行为同步性框架来概念化成对结合,可能有助于更深入地理解社会经历和互动如何影响大脑和行为的细微差别。