小心!不同方法导致倭黑猩猩打哈欠传染调节的结果不同

IF 2 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY
Sara De Vittoris, Marta Caselli, Elisa Demuru, Lisa Gillespie, Ivan Norscia
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引用次数: 0

摘要

传染性打哈欠(CY)与生理同步有关,也可能与情绪传染有关,当一个人打哈欠时,其他人也会打哈欠。通过自然或实验研究(分别使用真实打哈欠和视频打哈欠),在不同的时间窗口(从触发刺激开始的几分钟内)对传染性打哈欠进行了调查,结果截然不同,尤其是在倭黑猩猩身上。我们验证了倭黑猩猩的结果差异是否可能源于不同的方法。我们在英国特威克罗斯动物园(Twycross Zoo)通过自然观察法(观察所有打哈欠的发生情况)和实验法(播放打哈欠/对照视频刺激)收集了 13 只倭黑猩猩打哈欠的数据。根据文献,我们使用 1 分钟和 3 分钟的窗口来检测 CY。由于 "裂变-融合 "管理,个体可能会形成永久性或非永久性关联(在自然环境下,更多或更少的熟悉对象)。视频打哈欠的刺激可能来自组伴或陌生人模型(在实验环境下,更熟悉或不熟悉的受试者)。刺激类型和时间窗口影响打哈欠的调节因素,但不影响打哈欠的检测。在 3 分钟试验和 1 分钟观察中,熟悉程度和年龄对 CY 的影响呈现出相反的趋势。在自然环境中,年龄最大、无永久性(而非永久性)关联的受试者的 CY 最高,但在试验中,年龄最小的受试者和内群(而非外群)模型的 CY 最高。CY的年龄效应差异可能是由于非语境化哈欠和受试者对视频的好奇心不成熟造成的。反向熟悉效应表明,CY 在促进与社会距离较远的群体伙伴的社会同步方面具有依赖情境的功能,因为不能作为一个群体进行协调可能会导致社会混乱。要全面了解运动复制现象,还需要补充方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Beware! Different methods lead to divergent results on yawn contagion modulation in bonobos

Beware! Different methods lead to divergent results on yawn contagion modulation in bonobos

Contagious yawning (CY)—linked to physiological synchronization and possibly emotional contagion—occurs when one individual's yawn induces yawning in others. CY was investigated over different time windows (minutes from the triggering stimulus) via naturalistic or experimental studies (using real and video yawns, respectively) with contrasting results, especially in bonobos. We verified whether in bonobos result divergences may derive from different methods. We gathered yawning data on 13 bonobos at Twycross Zoo (UK) via a naturalistic (all-occurrences observations) and experimental approach (by showing yawn/control video stimuli). Based on literature, we used 1- and 3-min windows to detect CY. Due to fission-fusion management, individuals could form permanent or non-permanent associations (more/less familiar subjects under naturalistic setting). Video yawn stimuli may come from group mates/stranger models (more/less familiar subjects under the experimental setting). Stimulus type and time window affected CY modulating factors but not CY detection. Familiarity and age effect on CY showed opposite trends in 3-min trials and 1-min observations. CY was highest in oldest, non-permanently (rather than permanently) associated subjects in the naturalistic setting, but in the youngest subjects and with ingroup (rather than outgroup) models in trials. The age effect differences on CY might be due to decontextualized yawns and immature subject curiosity toward videos. The reversed familiarity effect suggests CY's context-dependent function in promoting social synchronization with socially distant group mates, as failing to coordinate as a group may lead to social disruption. Complementary methods are needed to fully understand motor replication phenomena.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
103
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The objective of the American Journal of Primatology is to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and findings among primatologists and to convey our increasing understanding of this order of animals to specialists and interested readers alike. Primatology is an unusual science in that its practitioners work in a wide variety of departments and institutions, live in countries throughout the world, and carry out a vast range of research procedures. Whether we are anthropologists, psychologists, biologists, or medical researchers, whether we live in Japan, Kenya, Brazil, or the United States, whether we conduct naturalistic observations in the field or experiments in the lab, we are united in our goal of better understanding primates. Our studies of nonhuman primates are of interest to scientists in many other disciplines ranging from entomology to sociology.
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