Abstract
Two language laws have been identified as consistent patterns shaping animal behaviour, both acting on the organisational level of communicative systems. Zipf’s law of brevity describes a negative relationship between behavioural length and frequency. Menzerath’s law defines a negative correlation between the number of behaviours in a sequence and average length of the behaviour composing it. Both laws have been linked with the information-theoretic principle of compression, which tends to minimise code length. We investigated their presence in a case study of male chimpanzee sexual solicitation gesture. We failed to find evidence supporting Zipf’s law of brevity, but solicitation gestures followed Menzerath’s law: longer sequences had shorter average gesture duration. Our results extend previous findings suggesting gesturing may be limited by individual energetic constraints. However, such patterns may only emerge in sufficiently-large datasets. Chimpanzee gestural repertoires do not appear to manifest a consistent principle of compression previously described in many other close-range systems of communication. Importantly, the same signallers and signals were previously shown to adhere to these laws in subsets of the repertoire when used in play; highlighting that, in addition to selection on the signal repertoire, ape gestural expression appears shaped by factors in the immediate socio-ecological context.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
New analyses (data excluding most prolific individual); new supporting analyses of Zipf's and Menzerath's law. Text edited and reorganised for clarity.