Kononowicz Tadeusz W, Rolando Felipe, Maigre Lucas, Sirigu Angela, Duhamel Jean-René, Ballesta Sébastien, Wirth Sylvia
Institut des Neurosciences Paris-Saclay (NeuroPSI), Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, Saclay, 91400, France.
Institut des Sciences Cognitives, UMR5229 CNRS, 67 Boulevard Pinel, Bron, 69500, France.
Sci Rep. 2025 Aug 22;15(1):30913. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-16391-w.
When sharing a space with others, many species including humans evolved a compromise regulating occupancy influenced by social determinants. For example, students in a classroom tend to sit close to their friends, keeping the same spots across days, revealing the social structure in the classroom. This place preference suggests that factors such as social hierarchy and affiliation can shape space utilization, contrasting with random walk models of agents moving at random in any given direction. Here, we asked whether spatial occupancy of macaques within two unisex groups of four individuals, reveals a structured space utilization beyond simple spatial affordance within the finite space. To this end, in two groups of four animals, we analyzed the simultaneously recorded positions of each individual while the group roamed in an enclosure. The data was gathered using automated devices that allow measuring accurate simultaneous positions and calculating precise inter-individual distance, which is impossible in classical ethology, even using GPS devices. Thus, our setup opens new possibilities for modelling approaches, to characterize social interaction dynamics in small enclosures. We found that (1) The identity of each animal could be decoded from its individual pattern of spatial occupancy, revealing that each animal sustained a consistent spatial footprint across multiple days. (2) The average distance between monkeys was a proxy for their social hierarchy, confirming that interpersonal distance is correlated with affiliation and dominance hierarchy. (3) Alternating the social context by removing one of the monkeys revealed that only removing the closest social partner influenced occupancy. (4) Finally, the distribution of distance between pairs of monkeys was bimodal and was modeled using a random walk approach with an additional parameter reflecting the propensity to stay in close proximity, which was again related to dominance hierarchy. These analyses reveal that space utilization is structured as a function of social determinants in macaques and demonstrate the usefulness simple modeling approaches to further study group organization in neuro-ethological settings.
当与其他物种共享空间时,包括人类在内的许多物种都进化出了一种受社会因素影响的调节空间占用的折衷方式。例如,教室里的学生往往会坐在朋友旁边,几天都占据相同的位置,这揭示了教室里的社会结构。这种位置偏好表明,社会等级和归属等因素可以塑造空间利用方式,这与随机游走模型中个体在任何给定方向上随机移动形成对比。在这里,我们研究了两组各有四只个体的单性别猕猴群体内的空间占用情况,是否揭示了有限空间内超出简单空间可供性的结构化空间利用方式。为此,在两组各有四只动物的群体中,我们分析了群体在围栏中活动时每个个体的同步记录位置。数据是使用自动设备收集的,这些设备能够测量精确的同步位置并计算精确的个体间距离,这在传统行为学中是不可能做到的,即使使用全球定位系统设备也不行。因此,我们的实验设置为建模方法开辟了新的可能性,以表征小围栏内的社会互动动态。我们发现:(1)可以从每只动物的个体空间占用模式中解码出其身份,这表明每只动物在多天内都保持着一致的空间足迹。(2)猴子之间的平均距离是其社会等级的一个指标,证实了人际距离与归属和优势等级相关。(3)通过移除其中一只猴子来改变社会环境,结果显示只有移除最亲密的社会伙伴才会影响空间占用。(4)最后,猴子对之间距离的分布是双峰的,并使用随机游走方法进行建模,该方法有一个额外参数反映保持近距离的倾向,这同样与优势等级相关。这些分析表明,猕猴的空间利用是根据社会因素构建的,并证明了简单建模方法在神经行为学环境中进一步研究群体组织的有用性。