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An evolutionary model of rhythmic accelerando in animal vocal signalling.

Created on 24 Apr 2025

Authors

Yannick Jadoul, Taylor A Hersh, Elias Fernández Domingos, Marco Gamba, Livio Favaro, Andrea Ravignani

Published in

PLoS computational biology. Volume 21. Issue 4. Pages e1013011. Apr 23, 2025. Epub Apr 23, 2025.

Abstract

Animal acoustic communication contains many structural features. Among these, temporal structure, or rhythmicity, is increasingly tested empirically and modelled quantitatively. Accelerando is a rhythmic structure which consists of temporal intervals increasing in rate over a sequence. Why this particular vocal behaviour is widespread in many different animal lineages, and how it evolved, is so far unknown. Here, we use evolutionary game theory and computer simulations to link two rhythmic aspects of animal communication, synchronization and overlap: We test whether rhythmic accelerando could evolve under a pressure for acoustic overlap in time. Our models show that higher acceleration values result in a higher payoff, driven by the higher relative overlap between sequences. The addition of a cost to the payoff matrix models a physiological disadvantage to high acceleration rates and introduces a divergence between an individual's incentive and the overall payoff of the population. Analysis of the invasion dynamics of acceleration strategies shows a stable, non-invadable range of strategies for moderate acceleration levels. Our computational simulations confirm these results: A simple selective pressure to maximise the expected overlap, while minimising the associated physiological cost, causes an initially isochronous population to evolve towards producing increasingly accelerating sequences until a population-wide equilibrium of rhythmic accelerando is reached. These results are robust to a broad range of parameter values. Overall, our analyses show that if overlap is beneficial, emergent evolutionary dynamics allow a population to gradually start producing accelerating sequences and reach a stable state of moderate acceleration. Finally, our modelling results closely match empirical data recorded from an avian species showing rhythmic accelerando, the African penguin. This shows the productive interplay between theoretical and empirical biology.

PMID:
40267164
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 24 Apr 2025.

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