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Female rhesus monkeys use special vocalizations while interacting with
infants, the way human adults use motherese, or “baby talk,” to engage
babies’ attention, new research at the University of Chicago shows.
“Motherese is a high pitched and musical form of speech, which may be
biological in origin,” said Dario Maestripieri, Associate Professor in
Comparative Human Development at the University. “The acoustic structure
of particular monkey vocalizations called girneys may be adaptively
designed to attract young infants and engage their attention, similar to
how the acoustic structure of human motherese, or baby talk, allows adults
to visually or socially engage with infants.”
In order to determine if other primates also use special vocalizations
while interacting with infants, researchers studied a group of
free-ranging rhesus macaques, which live on an island off the coast of
Puerto Rico. They studied the vocalizations exchanged between adult
females and found that grunts and girneys increased dramatically when a
baby was present. They also found that when a baby wandered away from its
mother, the other females looked at the baby and vocalized, suggesting
that the call was intended for the baby.
“Adult females become highly aroused while observing the infants of
other group members,” explains lead author of the article, Jessica Whitham,
a recent Ph.D. graduate of the University of Chicago, who investigated
this topic as a doctoral student at the University and currently works at
Brookfield Zoo near Chicago. “While intently watching infants, females
excitedly wag their tails and emit long strings of grunts and girneys.
“The calls appear to be used to elicit infants’ attention and encourage
their behavior. They also have the effect of increasing social tolerance
in the mother and facilitating the interactions between females with
babies in general. Thus, the attraction to other females’ infants results
in a relatively relaxed context of interaction where the main focus of
attention is the baby,” Maestripieri and his colleagues write in the
article, “Intended Receivers and Functional Significance of Grunt and
Girney Vocalizations in Free-Ranging Rhesus Macaques” published in the
current issue of the journal Ethology. In addition to Whitham and
Maestripieri, Dr. Melissa Gerald, a researcher at the University of Puerto
Rico, was also a co-author.
Researchers have long been interested in the noises that non-human
primates make and how they are used for communication. Monkey
vocalizations could be carrying information that the sender expects the
recipient to understand, or they could be noises that the recipient can
draw inferences from, but are not intended to carry information. A human
sneeze, for instance, is a noise that people understand may be associated
with a cold, but it did not develop evolutionarily to convey information.
The study by Maestripieri’s team showed that the grunts and girneys
emitted by the rhesus macaques fall into the category of vocalizations not
intended to convey specific information, and appear to be used to attract
other individuals’ attention or change their emotional states. When
females vocalize to young infants, however, the infants’ mothers infer
that the females simply want to play with the infants and are unlikely to
harm them. Therefore, these vocalizations may facilitate adult females’
interactions not only with infants, but with the infants’ mothers as well.
They found, for instance, that the grunts and girneys were sometimes
followed by an approach and grooming of the mothers.
Additionally they discovered that, unlike human mothers, the rhesus
macaque mothers did not direct grunts or girneys toward their own
offspring. It could be that the monkey mothers are familiar with their own
offspring and use the vocalizations with other babies because they are
excited about the novelty of seeing a new infant, Maestripieri said.
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