A group of monkeys has been found to show a selective form of behavior once thought limited to homo sapiens, in which the primates reject humans they observe engaging in selfish behavior.
The study, published in Nature Communications, explains:
“We find that the monkeys accept food less frequently from those who persistently reject another’s requests for help. This negative social evaluation effect is robust across conditions, and tightly linked to explicit refusal to help. Evaluation of potential helpfulness based on third-party interactions may thus not be unique to humans.”
In the study, two humans acted out scenarios in which one of them refused to help the other open a glass jar that contained a toy. A group of seven capuchin monkeys watched the interactions after having been trained to receive food from only one person at a time.
When the two actors then offered food to the monkeys, the monkeys gravitated towards the human who had exhibited cooperative behavior.
But why did the monkeys reject the “selfish” human offering free food? The study suggests that selfish behavior may be seen by the monkeys as “dangerous” behavior.
“Explicit refusal to help is a signal that you’re dangerous, that you’re negative,” Kiley Hamlin, a developmental psychologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, told Scientific American.
The capuchin monkeys are highly social and cooperative, so the study’s findings do not necessarily translate to all animals. But it does raise the possibility of the behavior being measured in other primates.
Another study published in January found that some chimpanzees have the ability to recognize fairness, another trait previously thought limited to humans.
The study, published in Nature Communications, explains:
“We find that the monkeys accept food less frequently from those who persistently reject another’s requests for help. This negative social evaluation effect is robust across conditions, and tightly linked to explicit refusal to help. Evaluation of potential helpfulness based on third-party interactions may thus not be unique to humans.”
In the study, two humans acted out scenarios in which one of them refused to help the other open a glass jar that contained a toy. A group of seven capuchin monkeys watched the interactions after having been trained to receive food from only one person at a time.
When the two actors then offered food to the monkeys, the monkeys gravitated towards the human who had exhibited cooperative behavior.
But why did the monkeys reject the “selfish” human offering free food? The study suggests that selfish behavior may be seen by the monkeys as “dangerous” behavior.
“Explicit refusal to help is a signal that you’re dangerous, that you’re negative,” Kiley Hamlin, a developmental psychologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, told Scientific American.
The capuchin monkeys are highly social and cooperative, so the study’s findings do not necessarily translate to all animals. But it does raise the possibility of the behavior being measured in other primates.
Another study published in January found that some chimpanzees have the ability to recognize fairness, another trait previously thought limited to humans.
Why no monkeys live in Israel.
ReplyDeleteThis is why a refuse freebies jewish/israelis hand out on the street. I suppose this is normal human behavior.
ReplyDeleteOne behavior that is uniquely human is limitless greed. No other animal will obtain and horde more food than he could eat in 100 lifetimes and watch his fellows starve and get satisfaction from it.
ReplyDelete