"Targeting or Supporting, What Drives Patterns of Aggressive Intervention in Fights?"
Authored by Charlotte Hemelrijk, Ivan Puga-Gonzalez, Matthew A Cooper
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/ajp.22505
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
GrooFiWorld is an individual-based, computational model of social
interactions that can be used to examine factors underlying
reciprocation and interchange of social behavior in primate societies.
Individuals within GrooFiWorld are programed to maintain spatial
proximity and thereby form a group. When an individual encounters
another individual in its proximity, the individual attacks the other if
the risk of losing is low. Otherwise, the individual considers grooming
the other. Patterns of social behavior that emerge in the model resemble
empirical data from primates. Triadic aggression emerges when an
individual attacks one of the former combatants by chance immediately
after an aggressive interaction, and reciprocation and interchange of
grooming and support emerge even though individuals have no intention to
help others or pay back services. The model generates predictions for
patterns of contra-intervention that are counterintuitive within a
framework of interchange of social services, such as that individuals
receive more contra-intervention from those whom they groom more
frequently. Here we tested these predictions in data collected on social
interactions in a group of bonnet macaques (Macaca radiata). We
confirmed the predictions of the model in the sense that
contra-intervention was strongly correlated with dyadic aggression which
suggests that contra-intervention is a subset of dyadic aggression.
Adult females directed more contra-intervention to those individuals
from whom they received more grooming. Further, contra-intervention was
directed down the dominance hierarchy such that adult females received
more contra-intervention from higher ranking females. Because these
findings are consistent with the predictions from the GrooFiWorld model, they suggest that the distribution of interventions in fights is
regulated by factors such as dominance rank and spatial structure rather
than a motivation to help others and interchange social services. (C)
2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Tags
Capuchin monkeys
Japanese macaques
Chimpanzees pan-troglodytes
Captive chimpanzees
Social-interaction patterns
Partner
choice
Reciprocal altruism
Bonnet macaques
Macaca-radiata
Agonistic
support