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社会压力促使大猩猩遵循“对话规则”。

Social pressure drives "conversational rules" in great apes.

作者信息

Pougnault Loïc, Levréro Florence, Leroux Maël, Paulet Julien, Bombani Pablo, Dentressangle Fabrice, Deruti Laure, Mulot Baptiste, Lemasson Alban

机构信息

Univ Rennes, Normandie Univ, CNRS, EthoS (Éthologie animale et humaine) - UMR 6552, 263 avenue du Général Leclerc, Rennes, 35042, France.

Université de Lyon/Saint-Etienne, CNRS, Equipe Neuro-Ethologie Sensorielle, ENES/CRNL, UMR5292, INSERM UMR_S 1028, 23 rue Paul Michelon, Saint-Etienne, 42023, France.

出版信息

Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2022 Apr;97(2):749-765. doi: 10.1111/brv.12821. Epub 2021 Dec 6.

Abstract

In the last decade, two hypotheses, one on the evolution of animal vocal communication in general and the other on the origins of human language, have gained ground. The first hypothesis argues that the complexity of communication co-evolved with the complexity of sociality. Species forming larger groups with complex social networks have more elaborate vocal repertoires. The second hypothesis posits that the core of communication is represented not only by what can be expressed by an isolated caller, but also by the way that vocal interactions are structured, language being above all a social act. Primitive forms of conversational rules based on a vocal turn-taking principle are thought to exist in primates. To support and bring together these hypotheses, more comparative studies of socially diverse species at different levels of the primate phylogeny are needed. However, the majority of available studies focus on monkeys, primates that are distant from the human lineage. Great apes represent excellent candidates for such comparative studies because of their phylogenetic proximity to humans and their varied social lives. We propose that studying vocal turn-taking in apes could address several major gaps regarding the social relevance of vocal turn-taking and the evolutionary trajectory of this behaviour among anthropoids. Indeed, how the social structure of a species may influence the vocal interaction patterns observed among group members remains an open question. We gathered data from the literature as well as original unpublished data (where absent in the literature) on four great ape species: chimpanzees Pan troglodytes, bonobos Pan paniscus, western lowland gorillas Gorilla gorilla gorilla and Bornean orang-utans Pongo pygmaeus. We found no clear-cut relationship between classical social complexity metrics (e.g. number of group members, interaction rates) and vocal complexity parameters (e.g. repertoire size, call rates). Nevertheless, the nature of the society (i.e. group composition, diversity and valence of social bonds) and the type of vocal interaction patterns (isolated calling, call overlap, turn-taking-based vocal exchanges) do appear to be related. Isolated calling is the main vocal pattern found in the species with the smallest social networks (orang-utan), while the other species show vocal interactions that are structured according to temporal rules. A high proportion of overlapping vocalisations is found in the most competitive species (chimpanzee), while vocal turn-taking predominates in more tolerant bonobos and gorillas. Also, preferentially interacting individuals and call types used to interact are not randomly distributed. Vocal overlap ('chorusing') and vocal exchange ('conversing') appear as possible social strategies used to advertise/strengthen social bonds. Our analyses highlight that: (i) vocal turn-taking is also observed in non-human great apes, revealing universal rules for conversing that may be deeply rooted in the primate lineage; (ii) vocal interaction patterns match the species' social lifestyle; (iii) although limited to four species here, adopting a targeted comparative approach could help to identify the multiple and subtle factors underlying social and vocal complexity. We believe that vocal interaction patterns form the basis of a promising field of investigation that may ultimately improve our understanding of the socially driven evolution of communication.

摘要

在过去十年中,有两种假说逐渐得到认可,一种是关于动物声音交流的总体进化,另一种是关于人类语言的起源。第一种假说认为,交流的复杂性与社会性的复杂性共同进化。形成具有复杂社会网络的更大群体的物种,拥有更丰富的声音库。第二种假说假定,交流的核心不仅体现在单个发声者能够表达的内容上,还体现在声音互动的结构方式上,语言首先是一种社会行为。基于声音轮流原则的原始对话规则形式被认为存在于灵长类动物中。为了支持并整合这些假说,需要在灵长类系统发育的不同层次上,对社会多样性物种进行更多的比较研究。然而,现有的大多数研究都集中在猴子身上,而猴子是与人类谱系距离较远的灵长类动物。由于与人类在系统发育上接近且具有多样的社会生活,大猩猩是此类比较研究的理想对象。我们认为,研究猿类的声音轮流现象可以填补关于声音轮流的社会相关性以及这种行为在类人猿中的进化轨迹的几个主要空白。事实上,一个物种的社会结构如何影响群体成员间观察到的声音互动模式,仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。我们收集了来自文献以及原始未发表数据(文献中未提及的部分),涉及四种大猩猩:黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)、倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)、西部低地大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla gorilla)和婆罗洲猩猩(Pongo pygmaeus)。我们发现,经典的社会复杂性指标(如群体成员数量、互动频率)与声音复杂性参数(如声音库大小、叫声频率)之间没有明确的关系。然而,社会的性质(即群体组成、社会关系的多样性和效价)和声音互动模式的类型(孤立叫声、叫声重叠、基于轮流的声音交流)似乎确实存在关联。孤立叫声是社会网络最小的物种(猩猩)中主要的声音模式,而其他物种则表现出根据时间规则构建的声音互动。在竞争最激烈的物种(黑猩猩)中,重叠叫声的比例很高,而在更宽容的倭黑猩猩和大猩猩中,声音轮流占主导。此外,优先互动的个体和用于互动的叫声类型并非随机分布。声音重叠(“合唱”)和声音交流(“对话”)似乎是用于宣传/加强社会关系的可能社会策略。我们的分析强调:(i)在非人类的大猩猩中也观察到了声音轮流现象,揭示了可能深深植根于灵长类谱系的通用对话规则;(ii)声音互动模式与物种的社会生活方式相匹配;(iii)尽管这里仅限于四个物种,但采用有针对性的比较方法有助于识别社会和声音复杂性背后的多种微妙因素。我们相信,声音互动模式构成了一个有前景的研究领域的基础,这最终可能会增进我们对社会驱动的交流进化的理解。

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