4.6 Article

Evidence that bottlenose dolphins can communicate with vocal signals to solve a cooperative task

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.202073

Keywords

cooperation; coordination; cognition; communication; bottlenose dolphin

Funding

  1. The Branco Weiss Fellowship -Society in Science

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Cooperation experiments have been used to explore animals' cognition in working towards a shared goal. While some species understand the need for a partner in cooperative tasks, there has been less focus on communication in cooperation experiments. Human cooperation is enhanced by physical synchrony and spoken language, with children adapting to complex tasks through vocal signals.
Cooperation experiments have long been used to explore the cognition underlying animals' coordination towards a shared goal. While the ability to understand the need for a partner in a cooperative task has been demonstrated in a number of species, there has been far less focus on cooperation experiments that address the role of communication. In humans, cooperative efforts can be enhanced by physical synchrony, and coordination problems can be solved using spoken language. Indeed, human children adapt to complex coordination problems by communicating with vocal signals. Here, we investigate whether bottlenose dolphins can use vocal signals to coordinate their behaviour in a cooperative button-pressing task. The two dolphin dyads used in this study were significantly more likely to cooperate successfully when they used whistles prior to pressing their buttons, with whistling leading to shorter button press intervals and more successful trials. Whistle timing was important as the dolphins were significantly more likely to succeed if they pushed their buttons together after the last whistle, rather than pushing independently of whistle production. Bottlenose dolphins are well known for cooperating extensively in the wild, and while it remains to be seen how wild dolphins use communication to coordinate cooperation, our results reveal that at least some dolphins are capable of using vocal signals to facilitate the successful execution of coordinated, cooperative actions.

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