Emotional Bookkeeping and High Partner Selectivity Are Necessary for the Emergence of Partner-Specific Reciprocal Affiliation in an Agent-Based Model of Primate Groups
Authored by Ellen Evers, Elisabeth H M Sterck, Vries Han de, Berry M Spruijt
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118921
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://web.science.uu.nl/behaviour/version14.3.zip
Abstract
Primate affiliative relationships are differentiated, individual-specific and often reciprocal. However, the required
cognitive abilities are still under debate. Recently, we introduced the
EMO-model, in which two emotional dimensions regulate social behaviour:
anxiety-FEAR and satisfaction-LIKE. Emotional bookkeeping is modelled by
providing each individual with partner-specific LIKE attitudes in which
the emotional experiences of earlier affiliations with others are
accumulated. Individuals also possess fixed partner-specific FEAR
attitudes, reflecting the stable dominance hierarchy. In this paper, we
focus on one key parameter of the model, namely the degree of partner
selectivity, i.e. the extent to which individuals rely on their LIKE
attitudes when choosing affiliation partners. Studying the effect of
partner selectivity on the emergent affiliative relationships, we found
that at high selectivity, individuals restricted their affiliative
behaviours more to similar-ranking individuals and that reciprocity of
affiliation was enhanced. We compared the emotional bookkeeping model
with a control model, in which individuals had fixed LIKE attitudes
simply based on the (fixed) rank-distance, instead of dynamic LIKE
attitudes based on earlier events. Results from the control model were
very similar to the emotional bookkeeping model: high selectivity
resulted in preference of similar-ranking partners and enhanced
reciprocity. However, only in the emotional bookkeeping model did high
selectivity result in the emergence of reciprocal affiliative
relationships that were highly partner-specific. Moreover, in the
emotional bookkeeping model, LIKE attitude predicted affiliative
behaviour better than rank-distance, especially at high selectivity. Our
model suggests that emotional bookkeeping is a likely candidate
mechanism to underlie partner-specific reciprocal affiliation.
Tags
Social relationships
Group-size
Macaques macaca-mulatta
Tension-reduction mechanism
Baboons
papio-cynocephalus
Grooming site preferences
Dominance relations
Rhesus macaques
Female baboons
Capuchin monkeys