Social disappointment and partner presence affect long-tailed macaque refusal behaviour in an ‘inequity aversion’ experiment

Author:

Titchener Rowan123ORCID,Thiriau Constance4,Hüser Timo5ORCID,Scherberger Hansjörg536ORCID,Fischer Julia137ORCID,Keupp Stefanie137ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, Deutsches Primatenzentrum GmbH, Kellnerweg 4, 37073 Goettingen, Germany

2. Institute of Psychology, University of Goettingen, Waldweg 26, 37073 Goettingen, Germany

3. Leibniz ScienceCampus Primate Cognition, 37077 Goettingen, Germany

4. Université Paris Nord, 99 Avenue Jean Baptiste Clément, 93430 Villetaneuse, France

5. Neurobiology Laboratory, Deutsches Primatenzentrum GmbH, Kellnerweg 4, 37073 Goettingen, Germany

6. Faculty of Biology and Psychology, University of Goettingen, 37077 Goettingen, Germany

7. Department for Primate Cognition, University of Goettingen, 37077 Goettingen, Germany

Abstract

Protest in response to unequal reward distribution is thought to have played a central role in the evolution of human cooperation. Some animals refuse food and become demotivated when rewarded more poorly than a conspecific, and this has been taken as evidence that non-human animals, like humans, protest in the face of inequity. An alternative explanation—social disappointment—shifts the cause of this discontent away from the unequal reward, to the human experimenter who could—but elects not to—treat the subject well. This study investigates whether social disappointment could explain frustration behaviour in long-tailed macaques, Macaca fascicularis . We tested 12 monkeys in a novel ‘inequity aversion’ paradigm. Subjects had to pull a lever and were rewarded with low-value food; in half of the trials, a partner worked alongside the subjects receiving high-value food. Rewards were distributed either by a human or a machine. In line with the social disappointment hypothesis, monkeys rewarded by the human refused food more often than monkeys rewarded by the machine. Our study extends previous findings in chimpanzees and suggests that social disappointment plus social facilitation or food competition effects drive food refusal patterns.

Funder

DFG, German Research Foundation

LeibnizScience Campus

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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