Data: Nonadjacent Dependencies and Sequential Structure of Chimpanzee Action During a Natural Tool-Use Task
Description
The code and data in this repository supports the manuscript: Howard-Spink et al. (2024) "Nonadjacent Dependencies and Sequential Structure of Chimpanzee Action During a Natural Tool-Use Task". The data contains over 8000 actions used by eight wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, when engaging with nuts and stone tools at an Outdoor Laboratory. To learn more about how data was collected and processed, see the methods section of the associated manuscript. To run the code, please download a version of RStudio (https://www.rstudio.com/) (This code was written in RStudio Version 1.2.5001). Total installation time ~ 10 minutes. Codes were written and tested on RStudio (RStudio (v1.2.5001); Running R v.4.2.1.) on operating system macOS Monterey 12.3.1. For further information or questions about presented data or scripts, contact the corresponding author at: elliot.howardspink@outlook.com
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Steps to reproduce
The outdoor laboratory (OL), Bossou, is a maintained clearing in the rainforest of Guinea (See Matsuzawa et al, [2011] The Chimpanzees of Bossou and Nimba). At the OL, nuts and stone tools are left out for wild chimpanzees, who visit the site as part of their daily ranging, and engage in natural nut-cracking behaviours. The chimpanzees are recorded engaging in such behaviours, and have been for several decades. This dataset includes descriptions of sequences of actions used by chimpanzees during nut cracking, from all recordings taken in the 2011-2012 field season (December-February). Sequences of actions were coded using an ethogram of 34 manipulations (each contained in data column 'behavior'), and 6 possible objects (each contained in data column 'Modifier 1'; see supplementary information to main manuscript for full ethogram). Actions were coded both in respect to the manipulation, e.g. 'grasp' and the target of the manipulation, e.g. 'nut' to produce a holistic description of the behaviour (in this case, the action would be 'grasp nut'). Action coding began whenever chimpanzees began interacting with a nut, nut fragment, or stone tool. Where the onset of the behaviour was observed, sequences began with a 'start' codon. Action coding ceased whenever chimpanzees dropped all relevant objects to engage in another behaviour, or rest for longer than one minute. Where the cessation of behaviour was observed, sequences were terminated with an 'Endbout' codon. Where chimpanzees moved out of sight during the behaviour, sequences were terminated with a 'not visible' codon. These sequences represent incomplete fragments of behaviour. As such, any sequence which did not begin with a 'start' and end with an 'end' codon is incomplete. Sequences are marked as complete or incomplete within the data. Instances of individual object play were included in the data, however social play between more than one individual was not included. Sequence data can be found in multiple formats, each contained in the subfolder 'Data': Event_Codes_Original - This contained the sequence data, separated into fragments. Each csv file is an uninterrupted, observed sequence of tool behaviour collected from an individual. EachNut - This contains the sequences of actions used by individual chimpanzees when cracking open individual nuts. These sequences are taken from 'Event_Codes_Updated'. Concatenated - This contains concatenated sequences (end to end) for each individual. Sequences are concatenated in the order they are observed (See script 1). MI Estimation - MI estimations from sequence data; see associated scripts for methods of MI estimation. Markov contains generated Markov sequences and their MI estimates. For more information on reproducing data, see associated manuscript in the description. All required R scripts are provided.
Institutions
Categories
Funding
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
#16H06283
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
#24000001
University of Oxford
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
#20002001
Boise Trust
Swiss National Science Foundation
PCEFP1_186832
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
#12002009
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
Core-to-core CCSN and U04-PWS
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
15K00204
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
JP17H06381
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
19K21824
Natural Environment Research Council
NE/L002612/1
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
#16002001
University of Oxford