Abstract

Various non-human animal species have been shown to exhibit behavioural traditions. Importantly, this research has been guided by what we know of human culture, and the question of whether animal cultures may be homologous or analogous to our own culture. In this paper, we assess whether models of human cultural transmission are relevant to understanding biological fundamentals by investigating whether accounts of human payoff-biased social learning are relevant to chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). We submitted 4- and 5-year-old children (N = 90) and captive chimpanzees (N = 69) to a token–reward exchange task. The results revealed different forms of payoff-biased learning across species and contexts. Specifically, following personal and social exposure to different tokens, children's exchange behaviour was consistent with proportional imitation, where choice is affected by both prior personally acquired and socially demonstrated token–reward information. However, when the socially derived information regarding token value was novel, children's behaviour was consistent with proportional observation; paying attention to socially derived information and ignoring their prior personal experience. By contrast, chimpanzees' token choice was governed by their own prior experience only, with no effect of social demonstration on token choice, conforming to proportional reservation. We also find evidence for individual- and group-level differences in behaviour in both species. Despite the difference in payoff strategies used, both chimpanzees and children adopted beneficial traits when available. However, the strategies of the children are expected to be the most beneficial in promoting flexible behaviour by enabling existing behaviours to be updated or replaced with new and often superior ones.

Highlights

  • Animal culture, defined as behaviour that is socially transmitted, has become the focus of a considerable number of empirical and theoretical studies [1]

  • When researchers began to consider the possibility of culture in nonhuman animals, the principles of human culture were used as a benchmark

  • We examined whether chimpanzees and 4- and 5-year-old children strategically copied a novel behaviour depending on the difference in payoff between the individual’s current and new behaviour

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Summary

Background

Animal culture, defined as behaviour that is socially transmitted, has become the focus of a considerable number of empirical and theoretical studies [1]. We compared their behaviour to 4- and 5-year-old children, who are adept social learners and copy selectively (using various model biases [6,11,12,13,14,15]), yet are untested regarding payoff-biased copying Both species were tested in either a familiar group setting or individually, employing a variant of the token exchange paradigm (see [31]), in which two token types are presented that can be exchanged for rewards. Asocial controls allowed assessment of whether social information influenced token selection, and were tested away from their group, in the key reward condition of Tpersonal-low followed by Tsocial-high. We quote the posterior mean, standard deviation and the highest posterior density interval (89% HPDI) for relevant predictor variable coefficients, b, in units of log-odds (negative and positive effects of the predictor variable in relation to the response variable lie either side of zero)

Results
Discussion
Findings
Conclusion: are humans a good model for other animals?
Full Text
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