Suppr超能文献

评估一种用于测量非人类灵长类动物优势等级的自动化方法的可靠性。

Assessing the reliability of an automated method for measuring dominance hierarchy in non-human primates.

机构信息

Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Adaptatives, UMR 7364, Strasbourg, France.

Centre de Primatologie, Université de Strasbourg, Niederhausbergen, France.

出版信息

Primates. 2021 Jul;62(4):595-607. doi: 10.1007/s10329-021-00909-7. Epub 2021 Apr 13.

Abstract

Among animal societies, dominance is an important social factor that influences inter-individual relationships. However, assessing dominance hierarchy can be a time-consuming activity which is potentially impeded by environmental factors, difficulties in the recognition of animals, or disturbance of animals during data collection. Here we took advantage of novel devices, machines for automated learning and testing (MALT), designed primarily to study non-human primate cognition, to additionally measure the dominance hierarchy of a semi-free-ranging primate group. When working on a MALT, an animal can be replaced by another, which could reflect an asymmetric dominance relationship. To assess the reliability of our method, we analysed a sample of the automated conflicts with video scoring and found that 74% of these replacements included genuine forms of social displacements. In 10% of the cases, we did not identify social interactions and in the remaining 16% we observed affiliative contacts between the monkeys. We analysed months of daily use of MALT by up to 26 semi-free-ranging Tonkean macaques (Macaca tonkeana) and found that dominance relationships inferred from these interactions strongly correlated with the ones derived from observations of spontaneous agonistic interactions collected during the same time period. An optional filtering procedure designed to exclude chance-driven displacements or affiliative contacts suggests that the presence of 26% of these interactions in data sets did not impair the reliability of this new method. We demonstrate that this method can be used to assess the dynamics of both individual social status, and group-wide hierarchical stability longitudinally with minimal research labour. Further, it facilitates a continuous assessment of dominance hierarchies in captive groups, even during unpredictable environmental or challenging social events, which underlines the usefulness of this method for group management purposes. Altogether, this study supports the use of MALT as a reliable tool to automatically and dynamically assess dominance hierarchy within captive groups of non-human primates, including juveniles, under conditions in which such technology can be used.

摘要

在动物社会中,支配地位是影响个体间关系的一个重要社会因素。然而,评估支配等级可能是一项耗时的活动,这可能会受到环境因素、动物识别困难或在数据收集过程中对动物的干扰的阻碍。在这里,我们利用新型设备,即机器自动化学习和测试(MALT),这些设备主要用于研究非人类灵长类动物的认知,来额外测量一个半自由放养的灵长类群体的支配等级。在使用 MALT 时,一个动物可以被另一个动物代替,这可能反映出一种不对称的支配关系。为了评估我们方法的可靠性,我们分析了自动化冲突与视频评分的样本,发现这些替代中有 74%包含了真正的社会替代形式。在 10%的情况下,我们没有识别出社会互动,而在剩下的 16%的情况下,我们观察到猴子之间的亲和接触。我们分析了长达数月的 MALT 的日常使用情况,涉及多达 26 只半自由放养的东加长尾猴(Macaca tonkeana),并发现从这些互动中推断出的支配关系与在同一时间段内观察到的自发攻击互动中得出的关系强烈相关。一个可选的过滤程序旨在排除偶然驱动的替代或亲和接触,表明在数据集中有 26%的这些互动并不会损害这种新方法的可靠性。我们证明,这种方法可以用于评估个体社会地位的动态,以及整个群体的层级稳定性,具有最小的研究工作量。此外,它促进了对封闭群体中支配等级的持续评估,即使在不可预测的环境或具有挑战性的社会事件中,这突显了该方法在群体管理方面的有用性。总的来说,这项研究支持使用 MALT 作为一种可靠的工具,在可以使用这种技术的条件下,自动和动态地评估非人类灵长类动物封闭群体中的支配等级,包括青少年。

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