Abstract

Reputation is a key component in social interactions of group-living animals and appears to play a role in the establishment of cooperation. Animals can form a reputation of an individual by directly interacting with them or by observing them interact with a third party, i.e., eavesdropping. Elephants are an interesting taxon in which to investigate eavesdropping as they are highly cooperative, large-brained, long-lived terrestrial mammals with a complex social organisation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) could form reputations of humans through indirect and/or direct experience in two different paradigms: (1) a cooperative string-pulling task and (2) a scenario requiring begging. Fourteen captive Asian elephants in Thailand participated in an experimental procedure that consisted of three parts: baseline, observation, and testing. In the observation phase, the subject saw a conspecific interact with two people—one cooperative/generous and one non-cooperative/selfish. The observer could then choose which person to approach in the test phase. The elephants were tested in a second session 2–5 days later. We found no support for the hypothesis that elephants can form reputations of humans through indirect or direct experience, but these results may be due to challenges with experimental design rather than a lack of capacity. We discuss how the results may be due to a potential lack of ecological validity in this study and the difficulty of assessing motivation and attentiveness in elephants. Furthermore, we highlight the importance of designing future experiments that account for the elephants' use of multimodal sensory information in their decision-making.

Highlights

  • Cooperation is defined as two or more individuals working together to obtain a mutual benefit and is frequently observed in group-living animals

  • We split the data into two subsets: the first subset, called “string-pulling eavesdropping”, tested whether elephants formed a reputation of the humans based on their indirect experience; given the limited experience after Session 1, we argue that the first trial of Session 2 is still based on observation rather than the brief direct experience a few days prior

  • String-Pulling Eavesdropping Five out of eight elephants chose the cooperative partner in the single trial of Session 1, and three out of eight elephants chose the cooperative partner in the first trial of Session 2

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Summary

Introduction

Cooperation is defined as two or more individuals working together to obtain a mutual benefit and is frequently observed in group-living animals. Reputation Formation in Asian Elephants the expression of cooperation in social animals are wellunderstood (West et al, 2007), but how cooperation is maintained within a social group to increase an animal’s chance of survival is not. Reputation refers to knowing how an individual behaves in a typical situation based on what is known about that individual’s behaviour in the past (Russell et al, 2008). It is another component in the social interactions of group-living animals and appears to play a key role in the establishment of cooperation. Reputation can contribute to survival (Abdai and Miklósi, 2016)

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