Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri

Vocal and gestural sequences of many primate species conform to two principles of compression: the compensation between the length of a construct and that of its constituents (Menzerath-Altmann law) and an inverse relationship between signal length and occurrence (Zipf's law of abbreviation). A...

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Main Authors: Daria Valente, Chiara De Gregorio, Livio Favaro, Olivier Friard, Longondraza Miaretsoa, Teresa Raimondi, Jonah Ratsimbazafy, Valeria Torti, Anna Zanoli, Cristina Giacoma, Marco Gamba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société Francophone de Primatologie 2023-03-01
Series:Revue de Primatologie
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/15061
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author Daria Valente
Chiara De Gregorio
Livio Favaro
Olivier Friard
Longondraza Miaretsoa
Teresa Raimondi
Jonah Ratsimbazafy
Valeria Torti
Anna Zanoli
Cristina Giacoma
Marco Gamba
author_facet Daria Valente
Chiara De Gregorio
Livio Favaro
Olivier Friard
Longondraza Miaretsoa
Teresa Raimondi
Jonah Ratsimbazafy
Valeria Torti
Anna Zanoli
Cristina Giacoma
Marco Gamba
author_sort Daria Valente
collection DOAJ
description Vocal and gestural sequences of many primate species conform to two principles of compression: the compensation between the length of a construct and that of its constituents (Menzerath-Altmann law) and an inverse relationship between signal length and occurrence (Zipf's law of abbreviation). Although Zipf's law is considered a universal in animal communicative systems, evidence for the adherence of non-human primate vocal behavior to linguistic laws is debated, and information on strepsirrhines is absent. We investigated the vocal behavior of the only singing lemur (Indri indri) to test whether the song of this species shows indication for compression. Because roars have a chaotic structure that prevents the recognition of each individual emission, and long notes are mainly emitted by males, we relied on the core part of the song (i.e., descending phrases, composed of two to six units). Our results indicate that songs conform to both laws. Indeed, shorter phrases are more likely included in the songs, in conformity to Zipf’s law, and unit length decreases with increasing phrase size, in line with Menzerath-Altmann law. Furthermore, despite a sexual dimorphism of both units and phrases duration, these laws characterize the vocal sequences of both sexes. In conclusion, we provide the first evidence for a compromise between signal duration and occurrence in the vocal system of a strepsirrhine species, suggesting that, in primates, selective pressures for compression are more ancestral than previously assumed.
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spelling doaj-art-5f80dabddd6e495085f9fd1a46568a2d2025-01-30T10:01:39ZengSociété Francophone de PrimatologieRevue de Primatologie2077-37572023-03-0113Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indriDaria ValenteChiara De GregorioLivio FavaroOlivier FriardLongondraza MiaretsoaTeresa RaimondiJonah RatsimbazafyValeria TortiAnna ZanoliCristina GiacomaMarco GambaVocal and gestural sequences of many primate species conform to two principles of compression: the compensation between the length of a construct and that of its constituents (Menzerath-Altmann law) and an inverse relationship between signal length and occurrence (Zipf's law of abbreviation). Although Zipf's law is considered a universal in animal communicative systems, evidence for the adherence of non-human primate vocal behavior to linguistic laws is debated, and information on strepsirrhines is absent. We investigated the vocal behavior of the only singing lemur (Indri indri) to test whether the song of this species shows indication for compression. Because roars have a chaotic structure that prevents the recognition of each individual emission, and long notes are mainly emitted by males, we relied on the core part of the song (i.e., descending phrases, composed of two to six units). Our results indicate that songs conform to both laws. Indeed, shorter phrases are more likely included in the songs, in conformity to Zipf’s law, and unit length decreases with increasing phrase size, in line with Menzerath-Altmann law. Furthermore, despite a sexual dimorphism of both units and phrases duration, these laws characterize the vocal sequences of both sexes. In conclusion, we provide the first evidence for a compromise between signal duration and occurrence in the vocal system of a strepsirrhine species, suggesting that, in primates, selective pressures for compression are more ancestral than previously assumed.https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/15061PrimatesVocal communicationLinguistic lawsLanguage evolutionCompression
spellingShingle Daria Valente
Chiara De Gregorio
Livio Favaro
Olivier Friard
Longondraza Miaretsoa
Teresa Raimondi
Jonah Ratsimbazafy
Valeria Torti
Anna Zanoli
Cristina Giacoma
Marco Gamba
Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
Revue de Primatologie
Primates
Vocal communication
Linguistic laws
Language evolution
Compression
title Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
title_full Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
title_fullStr Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
title_full_unstemmed Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
title_short Les lois linguistiques de la brièveté : conformité chez le lémurien chanteur Indri indri
title_sort les lois linguistiques de la brievete conformite chez le lemurien chanteur indri indri
topic Primates
Vocal communication
Linguistic laws
Language evolution
Compression
url https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/15061
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