Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task

Many of the complex behaviours of humans involve the production of nonadjacent dependencies between sequence elements, which in part can be generated through the hierarchical organization of sequences. To understand how these structural properties of human behaviours evolved, we can gain valuable in...

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Main Authors: Elliot Howard-Spink, Misato Hayashi, Tetsuro Matsuzawa, Daniel Schofield, Thibaud Gruber, Dora Biro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2024-12-01
Series:PeerJ
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Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/18484.pdf
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author Elliot Howard-Spink
Misato Hayashi
Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Daniel Schofield
Thibaud Gruber
Dora Biro
author_facet Elliot Howard-Spink
Misato Hayashi
Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Daniel Schofield
Thibaud Gruber
Dora Biro
author_sort Elliot Howard-Spink
collection DOAJ
description Many of the complex behaviours of humans involve the production of nonadjacent dependencies between sequence elements, which in part can be generated through the hierarchical organization of sequences. To understand how these structural properties of human behaviours evolved, we can gain valuable insight from studying the sequential behaviours of nonhuman animals. Among the behaviours of nonhuman apes, tool use has been hypothesised to be a domain of behaviour which likely involves hierarchical organization, and may therefore possess nonadjacent dependencies between sequential actions. However thus far, evidence supporting hierarchical organization of great-ape tool use comes from methodologies which have been criticised in their objectivity. Additionally, the extent to which nonadjacent dependencies appear in primate action sequences during tool use has not been formally investigated. We used estimations of mutual information (MI)—a measure of dependency strength between sequence elements—to evaluate both the extent to which wild chimpanzees produce nonadjacent dependencies during a naturalistic tool-use task (nut cracking), as well as how sequences of actions are likely organized during tool use. Half of adult chimpanzees produced nonadjacent dependencies at significantly greater sequential distances than comparable, nonhierarchical Markov models once repeated actions had been accounted for. Additionally, for the majority of chimpanzees, MI decay with increasing sequential distance included a power-law relationship, which is a key indicator that the action sequences produced by chimpanzees likely entail some degree of hierarchical organization. Our analysis offered the greatest support for a system of organization where short subroutines of actions (2–8 actions long) are hierarchically arranged into longer sequences—a finding which is consistent with previous qualitative descriptions of ape tool-use behaviours. Interindividual variability was detected within our analysis in both the maximum distance dependencies were detected, and the most likely structuring mechanism for sequential action organization. We discuss these results in light of possible interindividual variation in the systems of action organization used by chimpanzees during tool use, in addition to methodological considerations for applications of MI estimations to sequential behaviours. Moreover, we discuss our main findings alongside hypotheses for the coevolution of complex syntax in language and tool-action across hominin evolutionary history.
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spelling doaj-art-496f6b7ceb9a4c848061ff2e2ca601b02024-12-07T15:05:11ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592024-12-0112e1848410.7717/peerj.18484Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use taskElliot Howard-Spink0Misato Hayashi1Tetsuro Matsuzawa2Daniel Schofield3Thibaud Gruber4Dora Biro5Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United KingdomChubu Gakuin University, Kakamigahara, Gifu, JapanChubu Gakuin University, Kakamigahara, Gifu, JapanSchool of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, University of Oxford, Oxford, United KingdomFaculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, and Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, SwitzerlandDepartment of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, United StatesMany of the complex behaviours of humans involve the production of nonadjacent dependencies between sequence elements, which in part can be generated through the hierarchical organization of sequences. To understand how these structural properties of human behaviours evolved, we can gain valuable insight from studying the sequential behaviours of nonhuman animals. Among the behaviours of nonhuman apes, tool use has been hypothesised to be a domain of behaviour which likely involves hierarchical organization, and may therefore possess nonadjacent dependencies between sequential actions. However thus far, evidence supporting hierarchical organization of great-ape tool use comes from methodologies which have been criticised in their objectivity. Additionally, the extent to which nonadjacent dependencies appear in primate action sequences during tool use has not been formally investigated. We used estimations of mutual information (MI)—a measure of dependency strength between sequence elements—to evaluate both the extent to which wild chimpanzees produce nonadjacent dependencies during a naturalistic tool-use task (nut cracking), as well as how sequences of actions are likely organized during tool use. Half of adult chimpanzees produced nonadjacent dependencies at significantly greater sequential distances than comparable, nonhierarchical Markov models once repeated actions had been accounted for. Additionally, for the majority of chimpanzees, MI decay with increasing sequential distance included a power-law relationship, which is a key indicator that the action sequences produced by chimpanzees likely entail some degree of hierarchical organization. Our analysis offered the greatest support for a system of organization where short subroutines of actions (2–8 actions long) are hierarchically arranged into longer sequences—a finding which is consistent with previous qualitative descriptions of ape tool-use behaviours. Interindividual variability was detected within our analysis in both the maximum distance dependencies were detected, and the most likely structuring mechanism for sequential action organization. We discuss these results in light of possible interindividual variation in the systems of action organization used by chimpanzees during tool use, in addition to methodological considerations for applications of MI estimations to sequential behaviours. Moreover, we discuss our main findings alongside hypotheses for the coevolution of complex syntax in language and tool-action across hominin evolutionary history.https://peerj.com/articles/18484.pdfNonadjacent dependenciesHierarchical cognitionSequential actionSyntaxMutual informationAction grammar
spellingShingle Elliot Howard-Spink
Misato Hayashi
Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Daniel Schofield
Thibaud Gruber
Dora Biro
Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
PeerJ
Nonadjacent dependencies
Hierarchical cognition
Sequential action
Syntax
Mutual information
Action grammar
title Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
title_full Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
title_fullStr Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
title_full_unstemmed Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
title_short Nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool-use task
title_sort nonadjacent dependencies and sequential structure of chimpanzee action during a natural tool use task
topic Nonadjacent dependencies
Hierarchical cognition
Sequential action
Syntax
Mutual information
Action grammar
url https://peerj.com/articles/18484.pdf
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