Contexts and behavioral correlates of trill vocalizations in wild white-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) |
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Authors: | Gros-Louis Julie |
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Institution: | Department of Psychology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA. jgroslou@indiana.edu |
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Abstract: | Primate vocalizations that appear to occur independently of specific contexts typically are considered to be contact calls. However, results from several recent studies indicate that these calls function to facilitate social interactions. White-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) emit a high-frequency vocalization, termed a "trill," in social interactions and during travel. In this study, immatures emitted most trills, but adult females also trilled; by contrast, adult males rarely trilled. Infants emitted the majority of trills, and they trilled at significantly higher rates than adult females. Infants trilled most when approaching other individuals. Furthermore, infants emitted proportionately more trills than other age classes when approaching other individuals. I therefore focused on the detailed context and immediate behavioral correlates of trilling by infants. Infants that trilled when approaching others tended to interact affiliatively with them subsequently (i.e., climbing on, touching, receiving grooming, and performing food inspection) more than infants that did not trill when approaching. Therefore, infant trilling may have had an immediate effect on the recipient's behavior. |
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Keywords: | Cebus capucinus trill social interaction vocal behavior |
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