AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how vocal rhythmic patterns in harbour seal pups are affected by their interactions with calling partners, drawing parallels to human conversational turn-taking.
  • It employs a multi-method analytical approach, combining categorical rhythm analysis, circular statistics, and time series analyses to quantify vocalizations under controlled conditions.
  • The findings reveal that the presence of a partner influences a pup's timing in calling and suggests that pups adjust their calls predictively, highlighting the integration of different methodologies to understand vocal interactivity in non-human animals.

Article Abstract

Rhythmic patterns in interactive contexts characterize human behaviours such as conversational turn-taking. These timed patterns are also present in other animals, and often described as rhythm. Understanding fine-grained temporal adjustments in interaction requires complementary quantitative methodologies. Here, we showcase how vocal interactive rhythmicity in a non-human animal can be quantified using a multi-method approach. We record vocal interactions in harbour seal pups () under controlled conditions. We analyse these data by combining analytical approaches, namely categorical rhythm analysis, circular statistics and time series analyses. We test whether pups' vocal rhythmicity varies across behavioural contexts depending on the absence or presence of a calling partner. Four research questions illustrate which analytical approaches are complementary versus orthogonal. For our data, circular statistics and categorical rhythms suggest that a calling partner affects a pup's call timing. Granger causality suggests that pups predictively adjust their call timing when interacting with a real partner. Lastly, the ADaptation and Anticipation Model estimates statistical parameters for a potential mechanism of temporal adaptation and anticipation. Our analytical complementary approach constitutes a proof of concept; it shows feasibility in applying typically unrelated techniques to seals to quantify vocal rhythmic interactivity across behavioural contexts. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Face2face: advancing the science of social interaction'.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9985970PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2021.0477DOI Listing

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