Article

Chimpanzees’ understanding of social leverage

Details

Citation

Sánchez-Amaro A, Duguid S, Call J & Tomasello M (2018) Chimpanzees’ understanding of social leverage. PloS one, 13 (12), Art. No.: e0207868. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207868

Abstract
Social primates can influence others through the control of resources. For instance, dominant male chimpanzees might allow subordinates access to mate with females in exchange for social support. However, little is known about how chimpanzees strategically use a position of leverage to maximize their own benefits. We address this question by presenting dyads of captive chimpanzee (N = 6) with a task resulting in an unequal reward distribution. To gain the higher reward each individual should wait for their partner to act. In addition, one participant had leverage: access to an alternative secure reward. By varying the presence and value of the leverage we tested whether individuals used it strategically (e.g. by waiting longer for partners to act when they had leverage in the form of alternatives). Additionally, non-social controls served to show if chimpanzees understood the social dilemma. We measured the likelihood to choose the leverage and their latencies to act. The final decision made by the chimpanzees did not differ as a function of condition (test versus non-social control) or the value of the leverage, but they did wait longer to act when the leverage was smaller—particularly in test (versus non-social control) trials suggesting that they understood the conflict of interest involved. The chimpanzees thus recognized the existence of social leverage, but did not use it strategically to maximize their rewards

Journal
PloS one: Volume 13, Issue 12

StatusPublished
Publication date12/12/2018
Publication date online12/12/2018
Date accepted by journal07/11/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35840
PublisherPublic Library of Science San Francisco, CA USA
eISSN1932-6203

People (1)

Dr Alejandro Sanchez Amaro

Dr Alejandro Sanchez Amaro

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology