Animal Behaviour and Cognition, Department of Biology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Centre for Research and Conservation, Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp, K. Astridplein 26, B 2018 Antwerp, Belgium.
Sci Adv. 2023 Feb 15;9(7):eade5675. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.ade5675.
Cultural transmission studies in animals have predominantly focused on identifying between-group variation in tool-use techniques, while immaterial cultures remain understudied despite their potential for highlighting similarities between human and animal culture. Here, using long-term data from two chimpanzee communities, we tested whether one of chimpanzees' most enigmatic social customs-the grooming handclasp-is culturally transmitted by investigating the influence of well-documented human transmission biases on their variational preferences. After identifying differences in style preferences between the communities, we show that older and dominant individuals exert more influence over their partners' handclasp styles. Mothers were equally likely to influence their offspring's preferences as nonkin, indicating that styles are transmitted both vertically and obliquely. Last, individuals gradually converged on the group style, suggesting that conformity guides chimpanzees' handclasp preferences. Our findings show that chimpanzees' social lives are influenced by cultural transmission biases that hitherto were thought to be uniquely human.
动物文化传播研究主要集中于识别工具使用技术方面的群体间差异,而尽管无形文化具有突显人类文化和动物文化相似性的潜力,它们却仍未得到充分研究。在这里,我们利用两个黑猩猩群体的长期数据,通过调查记录在案的人类传播偏见对其变异偏好的影响,来检验黑猩猩最神秘的社交习俗之一——梳理握手是否通过文化传播。在确定了两个群体之间的风格偏好差异后,我们发现年龄较大和占主导地位的个体对其伴侣的握手风格施加了更大的影响。母亲与非亲属施加影响的可能性相同,这表明风格是垂直和斜向传播的。最后,个体逐渐与群体风格趋同,这表明从众引导了黑猩猩的握手偏好。我们的研究结果表明,黑猩猩的社会生活受到文化传播偏见的影响,而这些偏见此前被认为是人类所特有的。