| Literature DB >> 23846397 |
Tabitha Price1, Julia Fischer.
Abstract
The search for the evolutionary roots of human language has fuelled much research into the cognitive mechanisms underlying communication in nonhuman animals. One core issue has been whether the context-specific calls of nonhuman animals are meaningful, with call meaning inferred from recipients' responses in the absence of supporting contextual cues. This direct inference may well offer an oversimplified view of how vocalisations are perceived, however, as responses under natural conditions are likely guided by contextual cues as well as by the signal. In this study, we investigate how the anti-predator responses of green monkeys, Chlorocebus sabaeus, are affected by alarm call structure and by context. We first simulated the presence of leopards and snakes to elicit alarm vocalisations and to identify predator-typical response behaviours. In both contexts, the monkeys produced chirp calls that revealed only graded variation in relation to predator type. We then carried out playback experiments to explore whether green monkeys would respond with predator-typical behaviour to leopard and snake chirps, and whether contextual cues, in the form of pre-exposure to a leopard or snake model, would modify these responses. Irrespective of context, subjects were more likely to respond to leopard chirps with a leopard-typical response. Predator priming did not have a significant effect on the type of response, but, together with call type, did affect response duration. This suggests that the immediate attribution of meaning was influenced by acoustic cues, whilst receiver's prior knowledge was incorporated to guide subsequent behaviour.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23846397 PMCID: PMC3920029 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-013-0660-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 3.084
Fig. 1Bar plots illustrating subjects’ behavioural responses to snake (n = 19) and leopard (n = 17) models. a The percentage of individuals that stood bipedally within 10 s of seeing a predator model. b The maximum height of subjects within 30 s of seeing a predator model
Fig. 2Spectrograms of paired chirp calls given to model snakes (top row) and model leopards (bottom row). For each context, the calls of four individuals are presented. The same individuals do not contribute calls for both contexts. Spectrograms were made with a 512 FFT and a Hamming window
Description of the acoustic parameters used to describe chirp call structure
| Measurement | Description |
|---|---|
| Duration (ms) | Duration of call unit |
| Peak frequency_1–4 (Hz) | Mean peak frequency at 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th temporal quartiles |
| First quartile_1–4 (Hz) | Mean first frequency quartile at 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th temporal quartiles |
| Second quartile_1–4 (Hz) | Mean second frequency quartile at 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th temporal quartiles |
| Third quartile_1–4 (Hz) | Mean third frequency quartile at 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th temporal quartiles |
| Wiener entropy | Mean value of noise within call. 0 = pure tone, 1 = random noise |
| Frequency range (Hz) | Mean frequency range |
| PF jump (Hz) | Maximum difference between successive peak frequencies |
| Peak frequency deviation (Hz) | Mean deviation between peak frequency and linear trend |
| Linear trend | Factor of linear trend of peak frequency |
Fig. 3Histogram showing the distribution of the first linear discriminant scores for chirp calls given in response to leopard (n = 62) and snake (n = 62) models
Description of the seven experimental conditions making up the prime and probe experimental design
| Condition | Prime | Probe |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | None | Control |
| 2 | None | Leopard chirp |
| 3 | None | Snake chirp |
| 4 | Leopard model | Leopard chirp |
| 5 | Leopard model | Snake chirp |
| 6 | Snake model | Leopard chirp |
| 7 | Snake model | Snake chirp |
Fig. 4Bar graphs illustrating the percentage of trials in which subjects a responded to playbacks of control (n = 10) and chirp (n = 20) stimuli; b climbed to > 2 m within 30 s of hearing the playback stimuli, and c stayed > 200 s in a tree subsequent to hearing the playback stimuli. For playback experiments, n = 10 for all conditions