Emergent Patterns of Social Affiliation in Primates, a Model
Authored by Charlotte Hemelrijk, Ivan Puga-Gonzalez, Hanno Hildenbrandt
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000630
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many patterns of affiliative behaviour have been described for primates, for instance: reciprocation and exchange of grooming, grooming others of
similar rank, reconciliation of fights, and preferential reconciliation
with more valuable partners. For these patterns several functions and
underlying cognitive processes have been suggested. It is, however, difficult to imagine how animals may combine these diverse
considerations in their mind. Although the co-variation hypothesis, by
limiting the social possibilities an individual has, constrains the
number of cognitive considerations an individual has to take, it does
not present an integrated theory of affiliative patterns either. In the
present paper, after surveying patterns of affiliation in egalitarian
and despotic macaques, we use an individual-based model with a high
potential for self-organisation as a starting point for such an
integrative approach. In our model, called GrooFiWorld, individuals
group and, upon meeting each other, may perform a dominance interaction
of which the outcomes of winning and losing are self-reinforcing.
Besides, if individuals think they will be defeated, they consider
grooming others. Here, the greater their anxiety is, the greater their
``motivation{''} to groom others. Our model generates patterns similar
to many affiliative patterns of empirical data. By merely increasing the
intensity of aggression, affiliative patterns in the model change from
those resembling egalitarian macaques to those resembling despotic ones.
Our model produces such patterns without assuming in the mind of the
individual the specific cognitive processes that are usually thought to
underlie these patterns (such as recordkeeping of the acts given and
received, a tendency to exchange, memory of the former fight, selective
attraction to the former opponent, and estimation of the value of a
relationship). Our model can be used as a null model to increase our
understanding of affiliative behaviour among primates, in particular
macaques.
Tags
Relationship quality
Long-tailed macaques
Post-conflict behavior
Pan-troglodytes-schweinfurthii
Female rhesus-monkeys
Japanese
macaques
Macaca-fascicularis
Grooming reciprocation
Postconflict
behavior
Stumptailed macaques