Abstract

A vital prerequisite for cumulative culture, a phenomenon often asserted to be unique to humans, is the ability to modify behaviour and flexibly switch to more productive or efficient alternatives. Here, we first established an inefficient solution to a foraging task in five captive chimpanzee groups (N = 19). Three groups subsequently witnessed a conspecific using an alternative, more efficient, solution. When participants could successfully forage with their established behaviours, most individuals did not switch to this more efficient technique; however, when their foraging method became substantially less efficient, nine chimpanzees with socially-acquired information (four of whom witnessed additional human demonstrations) relinquished their old behaviour in favour of the more efficient one. Only a single chimpanzee in control groups, who had not witnessed a knowledgeable model, discovered this. Individuals who switched were later able to combine components of their two learned techniques to produce a more efficient solution than their extensively used, original foraging method. These results suggest that, although chimpanzees show a considerable degree of conservatism, they also have an ability to combine independent behaviours to produce efficient compound action sequences; one of the foundational abilities (or candidate mechanisms) for human cumulative culture.

Highlights

  • A vital prerequisite for cumulative culture, a phenomenon often asserted to be unique to humans, is the ability to modify behaviour and flexibly switch to more productive or efficient alternatives

  • Success rate became significantly lower in Experiment 2 (E2) compared to Experiment 1 when using the inefficient method (One-tailed Wilcoxon Signed ranks test Z =−​2.84, n = 10, P = 0.001, medianE1 = 100%, medianE2 = 25%, r =−​0.64)

  • Success rate was significantly lower in E2 than in E1 for those using the inefficient method in the ‘non-seeded’ groups (One-tailed Wilcoxon Signed ranks test Z =−​2.38, n = 7, P = 0.008, medianE1 = 100%, medianE2 = 14.3%, r = −0​ .64)

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Summary

Captive Mother

Of reward through lack of expertise in this method[41,42]. chimpanzees, who at the start of the testing period were already well practiced at the inefficient method, effectively halved the time taken to successfully extract the token across the testing period. Other chimpanzees still displayed a high degree of behavioural conservatism, in line with previous research[13,16,18,19,20,21], showing a difficulty in inhibiting use of a highly inefficient established behaviour, with varying levels of perseveration This was most evident in the ‘social information’ groups, where despite many observations of a far more efficient alternative, six individuals continued in their old behaviour for some time, with four only switching behaviours following salient social information engineered though human demonstrations, and the two remaining individuals never relinquishing their inefficient solutions. Five exclusively used the efficient method, three flexibly switched between using both methods, and two exclusively returned to the inefficient method (Fig. 4 and Table 2)

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