Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Leitão, António, Lucas, Maxime, Poetto, Simone, Hersh, Taylor A., Gero, Shane, Gruber, David, Bronstein, Michael, Petri, Giovanni
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05304
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866916654719434752
author Leitão, António
Lucas, Maxime
Poetto, Simone
Hersh, Taylor A.
Gero, Shane
Gruber, David
Bronstein, Michael
Petri, Giovanni
author_facet Leitão, António
Lucas, Maxime
Poetto, Simone
Hersh, Taylor A.
Gero, Shane
Gruber, David
Bronstein, Michael
Petri, Giovanni
contents We provide quantitative evidence suggesting social learning in sperm whales across socio-cultural boundaries, using acoustic data from the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Traditionally, sperm whale populations are categorized into clans based on their vocal repertoire: the rhythmically patterned click sequences (codas) that they use. Among these codas, identity codas function as symbolic markers for each clan, accounting for 35-60% of codas they produce. We introduce a computational method to model whale speech, which encodes rhythmic micro-variations within codas, capturing their vocal style. We find that vocal style-clans closely align with repertoire-clans. However, contrary to vocal repertoire, we show that sympatry increases vocal style similarity between clans for non-identity codas, i.e. most codas, suggesting social learning across cultural boundaries. More broadly, this subcoda structure model offers a framework for comparing communication systems in other species, with potential implications for deeper understanding of vocal and cultural transmission within animal societies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2307_05304
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Evidence of social learning across symbolic cultural barriers in sperm whales
Leitão, António
Lucas, Maxime
Poetto, Simone
Hersh, Taylor A.
Gero, Shane
Gruber, David
Bronstein, Michael
Petri, Giovanni
Social and Information Networks
Applications
We provide quantitative evidence suggesting social learning in sperm whales across socio-cultural boundaries, using acoustic data from the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Traditionally, sperm whale populations are categorized into clans based on their vocal repertoire: the rhythmically patterned click sequences (codas) that they use. Among these codas, identity codas function as symbolic markers for each clan, accounting for 35-60% of codas they produce. We introduce a computational method to model whale speech, which encodes rhythmic micro-variations within codas, capturing their vocal style. We find that vocal style-clans closely align with repertoire-clans. However, contrary to vocal repertoire, we show that sympatry increases vocal style similarity between clans for non-identity codas, i.e. most codas, suggesting social learning across cultural boundaries. More broadly, this subcoda structure model offers a framework for comparing communication systems in other species, with potential implications for deeper understanding of vocal and cultural transmission within animal societies.
title Evidence of social learning across symbolic cultural barriers in sperm whales
topic Social and Information Networks
Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05304