Mutual dependencies between vocal and visual signals of squirrel monkeys |
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Authors: | D. Barclay M. Maurus E. Wiesner |
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Affiliation: | (1) Max-Planck-Institut für Psychiatrie, Kraepelinstrasse 2, D-8000 München 40, Federal Republic of Germany |
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Abstract: | Visually recognizable social signals and structural call components, which had been demonstrated to be of social relevance within their own communication channel in previous experiments (disregarding or experimentally excluding other ones), were treated together, and their inter-dependencies analyzed when they were performed simultaneously in spontaneous behavior sequences of pairs of adult squirrel monkeys. It was found that: (1) all call classes were uttered within periods when either genital display or “triumph gesture” were shown; (2) production rates of particular vocal classes significantly deviated from no-display periods; (3) degree and direction of deviations (more/less frequent) were quite specific for both vocal and nonvocal classes (Figs. 1a & 1b); (4) differences depended also on which animal actually displayed (the vocalizing one, the other one, or both; Fig. 3); and (5) differences found for single animals when they played different roles in the experimental situation were smaller than those found between individuals, which could be related to dominance status (Table 2). The possibility of mutual modification of signals of different modalities and perspectives for future work are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Vocalizations Visually recognizable Signals Squirrel monkeys Behavior sequences |
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