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Similarities and differences in the functional architecture of mother-infant communication in rhesus macaque and British mother-infant dyads

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posted on 2024-03-13, 10:15 authored by Valentina SclafaniValentina Sclafani, Leonardo De Pascalis, Laura Bozicevic, Alessia Sepe, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Lynne Murray

Similarly to humans, rhesus macaques engage in mother-infant face-to-face interactions. However, no previous studies have described the naturally occurring structure and development of mother-infant interactions in this population and used a comparative-developmental perspective to directly compare them to the ones reported in humans. Here, we investigate the development of infant communication, and maternal responsiveness in the two groups. We video-recorded mother-infant interactions in both groups in naturalistic settings and analysed them with the same micro-analytic coding scheme. Results show that infant social expressiveness and maternal responsiveness are similarly structured in humans and macaques. Both human and macaque mothers use specific mirroring responses to specific infant social behaviours (modified mirroring to communicative signals, enriched mirroring to affiliative gestures). However, important differences were identified in the development of infant social expressiveness, and in forms of maternal responsiveness, with vocal responses and marking behaviours being predominantly human. Results indicate a common functional architecture of mother-infant communication in humans and monkeys, and contribute to theories concerning the evolution of specific traits of human behaviour.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Scientific Reports

Volume

13

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

ISSN

2045-2322

eISSN

2045-2322

Date Submitted

2023-09-11

Date Accepted

2023-07-27

Date of First Publication

2023-08-13

Date of Final Publication

2023-08-13

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-09-07

ePrints ID

56085

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