Howard-Spink Elliot, Hayashi Misato, Matsuzawa Tetsuro, Schofield Daniel, Gruber Thibaud, Biro Dora
Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Development and Evolution of Cognition Group, Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Konstanz, Germany.
PeerJ. 2024 Dec 5;12:e18484. doi: 10.7717/peerj.18484. eCollection 2024.
Many of the complex behaviours of humans involve the production of nonadjacent dependencies between sequence elements, which in part can be generated through the hierarchical organization of sequences. To understand how these structural properties of human behaviours evolved, we can gain valuable insight from studying the sequential behaviours of nonhuman animals. Among the behaviours of nonhuman apes, tool use has been hypothesised to be a domain of behaviour which likely involves hierarchical organization, and may therefore possess nonadjacent dependencies between sequential actions. However thus far, evidence supporting hierarchical organization of great-ape tool use comes from methodologies which have been criticised in their objectivity. Additionally, the extent to which nonadjacent dependencies appear in primate action sequences during tool use has not been formally investigated. We used estimations of mutual information (MI)-a measure of dependency strength between sequence elements-to evaluate both the extent to which wild chimpanzees produce nonadjacent dependencies during a naturalistic tool-use task (nut cracking), as well as how sequences of actions are likely organized during tool use. Half of adult chimpanzees produced nonadjacent dependencies at significantly greater sequential distances than comparable, nonhierarchical Markov models once repeated actions had been accounted for. Additionally, for the majority of chimpanzees, MI decay with increasing sequential distance included a power-law relationship, which is a key indicator that the action sequences produced by chimpanzees likely entail some degree of hierarchical organization. Our analysis offered the greatest support for a system of organization where short subroutines of actions (2-8 actions long) are hierarchically arranged into longer sequences-a finding which is consistent with previous qualitative descriptions of ape tool-use behaviours. Interindividual variability was detected within our analysis in both the maximum distance dependencies were detected, and the most likely structuring mechanism for sequential action organization. We discuss these results in light of possible interindividual variation in the systems of action organization used by chimpanzees during tool use, in addition to methodological considerations for applications of MI estimations to sequential behaviours. Moreover, we discuss our main findings alongside hypotheses for the coevolution of complex syntax in language and tool-action across hominin evolutionary history.
人类的许多复杂行为都涉及序列元素之间非相邻依赖关系的产生,部分这种依赖关系可通过序列的层次组织来生成。为了解人类行为的这些结构特性是如何演化的,我们可以从研究非人类动物的序列行为中获得有价值的见解。在非人类猿类的行为中,工具使用被假设为一个可能涉及层次组织的行为领域,因此在连续动作之间可能存在非相邻依赖关系。然而,到目前为止,支持类人猿工具使用层次组织的证据来自于其客观性受到批评的方法。此外,在工具使用过程中,灵长类动物动作序列中出现非相邻依赖关系的程度尚未得到正式研究。我们使用互信息(MI)估计——一种衡量序列元素之间依赖强度的指标——来评估野生黑猩猩在自然主义工具使用任务(砸坚果)中产生非相邻依赖关系的程度,以及工具使用过程中动作序列可能是如何组织的。一旦考虑了重复动作,一半的成年黑猩猩产生非相邻依赖关系的连续距离明显大于可比的非层次马尔可夫模型。此外,对于大多数黑猩猩来说,MI随连续距离增加的衰减包括幂律关系,这是一个关键指标,表明黑猩猩产生的动作序列可能具有一定程度的层次组织。我们的分析为一个组织系统提供了最大支持,在这个系统中,短的动作子例程(2 - 8个动作长)被层次排列成更长的序列——这一发现与之前对猿类工具使用行为的定性描述一致。在我们的分析中,在检测到的最大距离依赖关系以及连续动作组织最可能的构建机制方面都发现了个体间差异。我们根据黑猩猩在工具使用过程中可能使用的动作组织系统中的个体间差异,以及将MI估计应用于连续行为的方法学考虑来讨论这些结果。此外,我们将主要发现与关于语言和工具动作复杂句法在人类进化历史中的共同演化假说一起进行讨论。