How vervet monkeys perceive their grunts: Field playback experiments |
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Authors: | Dorothy L Cheney Robert M Seyfarth |
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Institution: | Rockefeller University, Field Research Center, Millbrook, N.Y. 12545 USA |
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Abstract: | Free-ranging vervet monkeys grunt to each other in a variety of social situations: when approaching a dominant or subordinate individual, when moving into a new area of their range, or when observing another group. Like other non-human primate vocalizations, these grunts have traditionally been interpreted as a single, highly variable call that reflects the arousal state of the signaller. Field playback experiments suggest, however, that what humans initially perceive as one grunt the monkeys perceive as at least four. Each grunt carries a specific meaning that seems to depend more on its acoustic properties than on the context in which it occurs. Results suggest that the vocalizations given by monkeys during social interactions may function in a rudimentary representational manner, as if to designate objects or events in the external world. |
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