Mere presence of co-eater automatically shifts foraging tactics toward ‘Fast and Easy' food in humans

Author:

Ogura Yukiko1ORCID,Masamoto Taku1,Kameda Tatsuya123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Psychology, The University of Tokyo, Japan

2. Brain Science Institute, Tamagawa University, Tokyo, Japan

3. Center for Experimental Research in Social Sciences, Hokkaido University, Hokkaido, Japan

Abstract

Competition for food resources is widespread in nature. The foraging behaviour of social animals should thus be adapted to potential food competition. We conjectured that in the presence of co-foragers, animals would shift their tactics to forage more frequently for smaller food. Because smaller foods are more abundant in nature and allow faster consumption, such tactics should allow animals to consume food more securely against scrounging. We experimentally tested whether such a shift would be triggered automatically in human eating behaviour, even when there was no rivalry about food consumption. To prevent subjects from having rivalry, they were instructed to engage in a ‘taste test' in a laboratory, alone or in pairs. Even though the other subject was merely present and there was no real competition for food, subjects in pairs immediately exhibited a systematic behavioural shift to reaching for smaller food amounts more frequently, which was clearly distinct from their reaching patterns both when eating alone and when simply weighing the same food without eating any. These patterns suggest that behavioural shifts in the presence of others may be built-in tactics in humans (and possibly in other gregarious animals as well) to adapt to potential food competition in social foraging.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

CiSHub

Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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