Abstract

In humans, vocal turn-taking is a ubiquitous form of social interaction. It is a communication system that exhibits the properties of a dynamical system: two individuals become coupled to each other via acoustic exchanges and mutually affect each other. Human turn-taking develops during the first year of life. We investigated the development of vocal turn-taking in infant marmoset monkeys, a New World species whose adult vocal behaviour exhibits the same universal features of human turn-taking. We find that marmoset infants undergo the same trajectory of change for vocal turn-taking as humans, and do so during the same life-history stage. Our data show that turn-taking by marmoset infants depends on the development of self-monitoring, and that contingent parental calls elicit more mature-sounding calls from infants. As in humans, there was no evidence that parental feedback affects the rate of turn-taking maturation. We conclude that vocal turn-taking by marmoset monkeys and humans is an instance of convergent evolution, possibly as a result of pressures on both species to adopt a cooperative breeding strategy and increase volubility.

Highlights

  • Social interactions consist of the coupling between two individuals

  • We investigated the development of vocal turn-taking in infant marmoset monkeys, a New World species whose adult vocal behaviour exhibits the same universal features of human turn-taking

  • We find that marmoset infants undergo the same trajectory of change for vocal turn-taking as humans, and do so during the same life-history stage

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Summary

Introduction

Social interactions consist of the coupling between two individuals. This coupling represents an autonomous, self-sustaining organization whereby the individuals mutually affect each other [1 –3], and, in essence, the coupling takes on a life of its own [3,4]. We investigated how turn-taking develops in infant marmoset monkeys by measuring their interactions with parents over their first two months of postnatal life. This result shows that infants gradually engage in vocal turn-taking during the first month of the postnatal period, but that parents are stable in their behaviour.

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