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Hierarchical Classification by Rank and Kinship in Baboons
Thore J. Bergman,1*Jacinta C. Beehner,1Dorothy L. Cheney,1Robert M. Seyfarth2
Humans routinely classify others according to both their individualattributes, such as social status or wealth, and membershipin higher order groups, such as families or castes. They alsorecognize that people's individual attributes may be influencedand regulated by their group affiliations. It is not known whethersuch rule-governed, hierarchical classifications are specificto humans or might also occur in nonlinguistic species. Herewe show that baboons recognize that a dominance hierarchy canbe subdivided into family groups. In playback experiments, baboonsrespond more strongly to call sequences mimicking dominancerank reversals between families than within families, indicatingthat they classify others simultaneously according to both individualrank and kinship. The selective pressures imposed by complexsocieties may therefore have favored cognitive skills that constitutean evolutionary precursor to some components of human cognition.
1 Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. 2 Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: thore{at}sas.upenn.edu
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