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The relative contribution of acoustic signals versus movement cues in group coordination and collective decision-making

To benefit from group living, individuals need to maintain cohesion and coordinate their activities. Effective communication thus becomes critical, facilitating rapid coordination of behaviours and reducing consensus costs when group members have differing needs and information. In many bird and mam...

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Published in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 2024-05, Vol.379 (1905), p.20230184
Main Authors: Liao, Chun-Chieh, Magrath, Robert D, Manser, Marta B, Farine, Damien R
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c552t-4f54379c887fca15945c6ac55ba5f085a516687584b1c4a1f83ec5ca0b4856813
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container_title Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences
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creator Liao, Chun-Chieh
Magrath, Robert D
Manser, Marta B
Farine, Damien R
description To benefit from group living, individuals need to maintain cohesion and coordinate their activities. Effective communication thus becomes critical, facilitating rapid coordination of behaviours and reducing consensus costs when group members have differing needs and information. In many bird and mammal species, collective decisions rely on acoustic signals in some contexts but on movement cues in others. Yet, to date, there is no clear conceptual framework that predicts when decisions should evolve to be based on acoustic signals versus movement cues. Here, we first review how acoustic signals and movement cues are used for coordinating activities. We then outline how information masking, discrimination ability (Weber's Law) and encoding limitations, as well as trade-offs between these, can identify which types of collective behaviours likely rely on acoustic signals or movement cues. Specifically, our framework proposes that behaviours involving the timing of events or expression of specific actions should rely more on acoustic signals, whereas decisions involving complex choices with multiple options (e.g. direction and destination) should generally use movement cues because sounds are more vulnerable to information masking and Weber's Law effects. We then discuss potential future avenues of enquiry, including multimodal communication and collective decision-making by mixed-species animal groups. This article is part of the theme issue 'The power of sound: unravelling how acoustic communication shapes group dynamic'.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rstb.2023.0184
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source Open Access: PubMed Central
subjects Animal Communication
Animals
Birds - physiology
Cues
Decision Making
Mammals - physiology
Movement
Review
Social Behavior
Vocalization, Animal - physiology
title The relative contribution of acoustic signals versus movement cues in group coordination and collective decision-making
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