Spread of arbitrary conventions among chimpanzees: a controlled experiment

Author:

Bonnie Kristin E12,Horner Victoria13,Whiten Andrew3,de Waal Frans B.M12

Affiliation:

1. Living Links, Yerkes National Primate Research CenterAtlanta, GA 30329, USA

2. Department of Psychology, Emory UniversityAtlanta, GA 30322, USA

3. Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, School of Psychology, University of St AndrewsFife KY16 9JP, UK

Abstract

Wild chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes ) have a rich cultural repertoire—traditions common in some communities are not present in others. The majority of reports describe functional, material traditions, such as tool use. Arbitrary conventions have received far less attention. In the same way that observations of material culture in wild apes led to experiments to confirm social transmission and identify underlying learning mechanisms, experiments investigating how arbitrary habits or conventions arise and spread within a group are also required. The few relevant experimental studies reported thus far have relied on cross-species (i.e. human–ape) interaction offering limited ecological validity, and no study has successfully generated a tradition not involving tool use in an established group. We seeded one of two rewarded alternative endpoints to a complex sequence of behaviour in each of two chimpanzee groups. Each sequence spread in the group in which it was seeded, with many individuals unambiguously adopting the sequence demonstrated by a group member. In one group, the alternative sequence was discovered by a low ranking female, but was not learned by others. Since the action-sequences lacked meaning before the experiment and had no logical connection with reward, chimpanzees must have extracted both the form and benefits of these sequences through observation of others.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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