Higher social tolerance is associated with more complex facial behavior in macaques
Facial expression
570
macaques
QH301-705.5
Science
FACS
590
Social complexity
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
MaqFACS
Social tolerance
facial action coding system
social complexity
Behavioral and Social Science
Animals
C120 - Behavioural biology
C800 - Psychology
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Biology (General)
animal communication
Social Behavior
communicative complexity
Ecology
Behavior, Animal
Primate
Communication
Q
05 social sciences
R
NetFACS
C120 Behavioural Biology
C800 Psychology
Macaca mulatta
Monkey
Aggression
Face
Medicine
DOI:
10.7554/elife.87008.2
Publication Date:
2023-08-31T12:14:30Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
The social complexity hypothesis for communicative complexity posits that animal societies with more complex social systems require more complex communication systems. We tested the social complexity hypothesis on three macaque species that vary in their degree of social tolerance and complexity. We coded facial behavior in >3000 social interactions across three social contexts (aggressive, submissive, affiliative) in 389 animals, using the Facial Action Coding System for macaques (MaqFACS). We quantified communicative complexity using three measures of uncertainty: entropy, specificity, and prediction error. We found that the relative entropy of facial behavior was higher for the more tolerant crested macaques as compared to the less tolerant Barbary and rhesus macaques across all social contexts, indicating that crested macaques more frequently use a higher diversity of facial behavior. The context specificity of facial behavior was higher in rhesus as compared to Barbary and crested macaques, demonstrating that Barbary and crested macaques used facial behavior more flexibly across different social contexts. Finally, a random forest classifier predicted social context from facial behavior with highest accuracy for rhesus and lowest for crested, indicating there is higher uncertainty and complexity in the facial behavior of crested macaques. Overall, our results support the social complexity hypothesis.
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CITATIONS (1)
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