Intermediate-term emotional bookkeeping is necessary for long-term reciprocal grooming partner preferences in an agent-based model of macaque groups
Authored by Ellen Evers, Elisabeth H M Sterck, Vries Han de, Berry M Spruijt
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1488
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://web.science.uu.nl/behaviour/version14.3.zip
Abstract
Whether and how primates are able to maintain long-term affiliative
relationships is still under debate. Emotional bookkeeping (EB), the
partner-specific accumulation of emotional responses to earlier
interactions, is a candidate mechanism that does not require high
cognitive abilities. EB is difficult to study in real animals, due to
the complexity of primate social life. Therefore, we developed an
agent-based model based on macaque behavior, the EMO-model, that
implements arousal and two emotional dimensions, anxiety-FEAR and
satisfaction-LIKE, which regulate social behavior. To implement EB, model individuals assign dynamic LIKE attitudes towards their group
members, integrating partner-specific emotional responses to earlier
received grooming episodes. Two key parameters in the model were varied
to explore their effects on long-term affiliative relationships: (1) the
timeframe over which earlier affiliation is accumulated into the LIKE
attitudes; and (2) the degree of partner selectivity. EB over short and
long timeframes gave rise to low variation in LIKE attitudes, and
grooming partner preferences were only maintained over one to two
months. Only EB over intermediate-term timeframes resulted in enough
variation in LIKE attitudes, which, in combination with high partner
selectivity, enables individuals to differentiate between regular and
incidental grooming partners. These specific settings resulted in a
strong feedback between differentiated LIKE attitudes and the
distribution of grooming, giving rise to strongly reciprocated partner
preferences that could be maintained for longer periods, occasionally up
to one or two years. Moreover, at these settings the individual's
internal, socio-emotional memory of earlier affiliative episodes (LIKE
attitudes) corresponded best to observable behavior (grooming partner
preferences). In sum, our model suggests that intermediate-term LIKE
dynamics and high partner selectivity seem most plausible for primates
relying on emotional bookkeeping to maintain their social bonds.
Tags
dominance
Chimpanzees pan-troglodytes
Social bonds
Macaca-mulatta
Female
baboons
Tailed macaques
Relationship quality
Barbary macaques
Vervet
monkeys
Neocortex size