Yawn Contagion and Modality‐Matching in the Female‐Bonded Society of Geladas (Theropithecus gelada)
ABSTRACT Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropit...
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Published in | American journal of primatology Vol. 87; no. 1; pp. e23709 - n/a |
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Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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ISSN | 0275-2565 1098-2345 1098-2345 |
DOI | 10.1002/ajp.23709 |
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Abstract | ABSTRACT
Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo‐housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female‐female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra‐unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter‐sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought.
Summary
Both visual and vocal cues induce yawn contagion in geladas, with yawns of different morphology and duration being similarly contagious
Yawn contagion comes with modality matching and morphological mirroring in geladas; notably, female‐female dyads exhibit the strongest rates of yawn contagion, matching and mirroring
Unlike previous data, dyadic grooming exchanged do not predict yawn contagion propensity |
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AbstractList | Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well-known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo-housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female-female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra-unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter-sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought. ABSTRACT Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo‐housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female‐female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra‐unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter‐sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought. Summary Both visual and vocal cues induce yawn contagion in geladas, with yawns of different morphology and duration being similarly contagious Yawn contagion comes with modality matching and morphological mirroring in geladas; notably, female‐female dyads exhibit the strongest rates of yawn contagion, matching and mirroring Unlike previous data, dyadic grooming exchanged do not predict yawn contagion propensity Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas ( Theropithecus gelada ) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo‐housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female‐female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra‐unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter‐sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought. Both visual and vocal cues induce yawn contagion in geladas, with yawns of different morphology and duration being similarly contagious Yawn contagion comes with modality matching and morphological mirroring in geladas; notably, female‐female dyads exhibit the strongest rates of yawn contagion, matching and mirroring Unlike previous data, dyadic grooming exchanged do not predict yawn contagion propensity Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well-known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo-housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female-female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra-unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter-sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought.Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well-known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and synchronization, the possible functions and evolutionary pathways of YC remain subjects of active debate. Among nonhuman animals, geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are the only species known to occasionally emit a distinct vocalization while yawning. Yet, the role of different sensory modalities in YC remains poorly understood. Due to their social and communicative complexity, geladas serve as an excellent model for investigating the effects of multimodality and social factors on behavioral contagion. Here we studied a large zoo-housed colony of geladas (103 subjects, 1422 yawns) and confirm the previous evidence for visual and auditory YC. Hearing, seeing, or hearing and seeing yawns significantly triggered contagious yawning at comparable levels. Additionally, we found no evidence of laterality influencing responses based on the side of detection. While the social bond, measured via grooming, between the trigger and receiver did not correlate with YC, a consistent sex effect emerged. Females responded more frequently to female than to male yawns and were more likely to match modality (i.e., vocalized vs. nonvocalized) and mirror morphology of other females' yawns. Effective female-female communication and affiliation are crucial for maintaining cohesion and fostering strong intra-unit relationships among geladas. Our results underscore the importance of different sensory components in the distribution of YC, particularly for species living in complex social systems. These findings raise further questions about the functional and emotional significance of yawning and potential inter-sexual differences, suggesting that the phenomenon is more complex than previously thought. |
Author | Francesconi, Martina Oliveri, Paolo Lemasson, Alban Palagi, Elisabetta Pedruzzi, Luca |
AuthorAffiliation | 3 Institut Universitaire de France France 2 Unit of Ethology, Department of Biology University of Pisa Pisa Paris Italy 1 EthoS (Ethologie Animale et Humaine) ‐ U.M.R 6552, Université de Rennes Université de Normandie, CNRS Rennes France 4 Natural History Museum University of Pisa Pisa Italy |
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Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Luca orcidid: 0000-0003-4716-3440 surname: Pedruzzi fullname: Pedruzzi, Luca email: luca.pedruzzi@phd.unipi.it, luca.pedruzzi@etudiant.univ-rennes.fr organization: University of Pisa – sequence: 2 givenname: Paolo surname: Oliveri fullname: Oliveri, Paolo organization: University of Pisa – sequence: 3 givenname: Martina surname: Francesconi fullname: Francesconi, Martina organization: University of Pisa – sequence: 4 givenname: Alban surname: Lemasson fullname: Lemasson, Alban organization: Institut Universitaire de France – sequence: 5 givenname: Elisabetta orcidid: 0000-0002-2038-4596 surname: Palagi fullname: Palagi, Elisabetta organization: University of Pisa |
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Keywords | contagious yawning behavioral contagion monkeys multimodal signal mirroring female sensitivity |
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Snippet | ABSTRACT
Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and... Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well‐known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and... Behavioral contagion is widespread in primates, with yawn contagion (YC) being a well-known example. Often associated with ingroup dynamics and... |
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SubjectTerms | Animal biology Animal Communication Animals Animals, Zoo - physiology behavioral contagion Cognitive science Complexity Contagion contagious yawning Cues Female female sensitivity Females Geographical distribution Grooming Hearing Lateralization Life Sciences Male Matching Mirroring monkeys Morphology multimodal signal mirroring Primates Sensory evaluation Sensory integration Social Behavior Social factors Social systems Synchronism Synchronization Theropithecus - physiology Theropithecus gelada Vertebrate Zoology Visual stimuli Vocalization Vocalization behavior Yawning Yawning - physiology Yawning behavior |
Title | Yawn Contagion and Modality‐Matching in the Female‐Bonded Society of Geladas (Theropithecus gelada) |
URI | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Fajp.23709 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39690471 https://www.proquest.com/docview/3160332481 https://www.proquest.com/docview/3146949260 https://hal.science/hal-04845611 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC11652820 |
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