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Bonobos modify communication signals according to recipient familiarity

Auteur(s)
Genty, Emilie 
Institut de biologie 
Neumann, Christof 
Institut de biologie 
Zuberbühler, Klaus 
Institut de biologie 
Date de parution
2015
In
Scientific Reports
No
5
Résumé
Human and nonhuman primate communication differs in various ways. In particular, humans base communicative efforts on mutual knowledge and conventions shared between interlocutors. In this study, we experimentally tested whether bonobos (Pan paniscus), a close relative to humans, are able to take into account the familiarity, i.e. the shared interaction history, when communicating with a human partner. In five experimental conditions we found that subjects took the recipients' attentional state and their own communicative effectiveness into account by adjusting signal production accordingly. More importantly, in case of communicative failure, subjects repeated previously successful signals more often with a familiar than unfamiliar recipient, with whom they had no previous interactions, and elaborated by switching to new signals more with the unfamiliar than the familiar one, similar to what has previously been found in two year-old children. We discuss these findings in relation to the human capacity to establish common ground between interlocutors, a crucial aspect of human cooperative communication.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/24723
_
10.1038/srep16442
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: Genty-2015-Bonobos modify communication signal.pdf (672.3 KB)
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