aggressive signals
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2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick K. Monari ◽  
Nathaniel S. Rieger ◽  
Kathryn Hartfield ◽  
Juliette Schefelker ◽  
Catherine A. Marler

AbstractSocial context is critical in shaping behavioral responses to stimuli and can alter an individual’s behavioral type, which would otherwise be fixed in social isolation. For monogamous biparental vertebrates, social context is critical as interactions are frequent and consistent, involving high interindividual dependence and cooperation that can lead to large fitness impacts. We demonstrate that in the strictly monogamous and highly territorial California mouse, individuals alter approach response to an aggressive conspecific playback stimulus, barks, to become more similar to their partner during early bonding prior to pup birth; an effect distinct from assortative mating. Additionally, sustained vocalizations, an affiliative ultrasonic vocalization when used between pair members, correlate with increased behavioral convergence following pair formation suggesting a role for vocal communication in emergent pair behavior. We identified the neuropeptide oxytocin as sufficient to promote behavioral convergence in approach behavior of paired individuals who differed in their initial behavioral type. Social context, specifically pair-bonding, appears vital for behavioral responses to aggressive signals. While non-bonded animals maintained stable responses, pair-bonding led to an emergent property: convergence in behavioral responses. This convergence can be driven by oxytocin revealing a significant expansion in oxytocin’s effects on behavioral coordination.


2020 ◽  
Vol 375 (1805) ◽  
pp. 20190420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Dal Pesco ◽  
Julia Fischer

To balance the trade-offs of male co-residence, males living in multi-male groups may exchange ritualized greetings. Although these non-aggressive signals are widespread in the animal kingdom, the repertoire described in the genus Papio is exceptional, involving potentially harmful behaviours such as genital fondling. Such greetings are among the most striking male baboon social interactions, yet their function remains disputed. Drawing on the comprehensive analysis from our own research on wild Guinea baboons, combined with a survey of the literature into other baboon species, we review the form and function of male–male ritualized greetings and their relation to the various social systems present in this genus. These ritualized signals differ between species in their occurrence, form and function. While ritualized greetings are rare in species with the most intense contest competition, the complexity of and risk involved in greeting rituals increase with the degree of male–male tolerance and cooperation. The variety of societies found in this genus, combined with its role as a model for human socioecological evolution, sheds light on the evolution of ritualized behaviour in non-human primates and rituals in humans. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Ritual renaissance: new insights into the most human of behaviours’.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Dal Pesco ◽  
Julia Fischer

To balance the trade-offs of male co-residence, males living in multi-male groups may exchange ritualized greetings. Although these non-aggressive signals are widespread in the animal kingdom, the repertoire described in the genus Papio is exceptional, involving potentially harmful behaviours such as genital fondling. Such greetings are among the most striking male baboon social interactions, yet their function remains disputed. Drawing on the comprehensive analysis from our own research on wild Guinea baboons, combined with a survey of the literature into other baboon species, we review the form and function of male-male ritualized greetings and their relation to the various social systems present in this genus. These ritualized signals differ between species in their occurrence, form, and function. While ritualized greetings are rare in species with the most intense contest competition, the complexity of and risk involved in greeting rituals increase with the degree of male-male tolerance and cooperation. The variety of societies found in this genus, combined with its role as a model for human socioecological evolution, sheds light on the evolution of ritualized behaviour in non-human primates and rituals in humans.


2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 1290-1302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Lucas Rodríguez ◽  
William G Eberhard

AbstractSexually-selected traits often show positive static allometry, with large individuals bearing disproportionately large structures. But many other sexually-selected traits show isometry or even negative allometry, with trait size varying relatively little with body size. We recently proposed that the functions of these traits (as aggressive signals, weapons, courtship signals, and contact courtship devices) determine their allometries. Positive allometry is generally favored for aggressive signals because aggressive signals are selected to emphasize body size (and thus fighting prowess). In contrast, the biomechanics of force application in weapons only sometimes select for positive allometry; the content of courtship signals is even less often related to body size; and contact courtship devices are selected to be relatively invariant across body sizes. Here we summarize the arguments in favor of this “functional allometry” hypothesis and expand a comparative test of its predictions. Our results indicate that sexual traits have the allometric slopes predicted by our hypothesis, regardless of which body part bears the structure.


Ethology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 124 (10) ◽  
pp. 724-732 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ines G. Moran ◽  
Stéphanie M. Doucet ◽  
Amy E. M. Newman ◽  
D. Ryan Norris ◽  
Daniel J. Mennill

2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Niederhauser ◽  
Adrienne L. DuBois ◽  
William A. Searcy ◽  
Stephen Nowicki ◽  
Rindy C. Anderson

2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 443-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raíssa Furtado ◽  
Rafael Márquez ◽  
Sandra Maria Hartz

Author(s):  
Szabolcs Fodor ◽  
Carlos Vázquez ◽  
Leonid Freidovich ◽  
Nariman Sepehri

Smooth operation of heavy-duty forestry cranes is not an easy task for the operators with the current joystick-based control method that is complex and non-intuitive. Moreover, abrupt movements of the same joysticks provoke aggressive signals that can lead to oscillatory motions in the actuators and in the entire crane. These oscillations, not only contribute to wear of the joint actuators but also can cause damage to both the operators and the environment; therefore, they must be attenuated. The proposed approach in this paper uses the popular input shaping control technique combined with a practical switching logic to deal with different frequency payload oscillations induced by the motion of the inner boom actuator of a forwarder crane. The results show a significant improvement in terms of visible oscillation reduction monitored through their appearance in the torque signal computed from pressure measurements. Experiments performed on a down-sized forestry crane verifies the effectiveness of the approach.


2013 ◽  
Vol 280 (1768) ◽  
pp. 20131401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dana L. Moseley ◽  
David C. Lahti ◽  
Jeffrey Podos

Mating signals of many animal species are difficult to produce and thus should indicate signaler quality. Growing evidence suggests that receivers modulate their behaviour in response to signals with varying performance levels, although little is known about if and how responses are affected by receiver attributes. To explore this topic we conducted two experiments with swamp sparrows, Melospiza georgiana , in which we challenged territorial males with playback of songs with trill rates that were natural, digitally reduced, or digitally elevated (control-, low- and high-performance stimuli, respectively). In our first experiment, we found that males responded more aggressively to control songs than to low-performance stimuli, that low-performance stimuli with the most severe trill-rate reductions elicited the weakest aggressive responses, and that the subjects' own trill rates predicted aggressive responses. In our second experiment, we found that male responses to high-performance stimuli varied significantly, in ways predicted by two factors: the degree to which we had elevated stimulus performance levels of high-performance stimuli, and subjects' own vocal performance levels. Specifically, males were less aggressive towards stimuli for which we had elevated performance levels to higher degrees, and subject males with higher vocal performances themselves responded more aggressively. These findings together offer a novel illustration of how responses to aggressive signals may rely not just on signal attributes, but also on attributes of responding animals themselves.


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