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It would be interesting to hear what some think the economic implications might be.

Selma

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Genetic Basis to Fairness, Study Hints

September 18, 2003
 By NICHOLAS WADE 




 

"It's not fair!" is a common call from the playground and,
in subtler form, from more adult assemblies. It now seems
that monkeys, too, have a sense of fairness, a conclusion
suggesting that this feeling may be part of the genetically
programmed social glue that holds primate societies
together, monkeys as well as humans. 

Two researchers at Emory University, Dr. Sarah F. Brosnan
and Dr. Frans B. M. de Waal, report today in the journal
Nature that they taught female capuchin monkeys to trade
pebbles for pieces of food. The capuchins were caged in
pairs, so that each member of a pair could see the other.
If one monkey got a grape in return for her pebble but the
other only a less desired piece of cucumber, the
shortchanged monkey would often refuse to hand over the
pebble in exchange or might decline to eat the cucumber -
both very unusual behaviors. 

These refusals were often accompanied by emphatic body
language, like dashing the pebble or the cucumber on the
floor, Dr. Brosnan said. The expressions of exasperation
were twice as common if the monkey offered a cucumber saw
her companion being given a grape without even having to
hand over a pebble. 

The behavior suggests that the monkeys have a sense of fair
treatment and respond negatively when their expectations
are violated, the researchers say. 

The finding bears on the question of whether the sense of
fairness found in all human societies is learned from
school and family or is instead an innate behavior fostered
by the genes. 

"The fact that we find the sense of fairness in a nonhuman
primate implies it is an evolved behavior and has a good
benefit," Dr. Brosnan said. 

Protesting unfair treatment of oneself, in other words,
probably has a genetic basis in capuchins and so presumably
in all social primates, including people. 

The food experiment was not conducted in male capuchins,
Dr. Brosnan said, because they tend to share food with
everyone, whereas females are more discriminate, sharing
only with those who share with them. 

The reason stems from the structure of capuchin society,
which is based on a harem system. A male shares food freely
because everyone around is either a sexual partner or a
child he has fathered. Females within a harem have no such
incentive and evidently measure out their favors on a basis
of reciprocity. 

The monkey research is part of a long-term effort by
evolutionary biologists to understand the genetic basis of
social behavior. Selfishness might seem the best way for an
individual to get the most genes into the next generation,
evolution's only coin of success. But biologists have come
to understand how cooperative behavior, under certain
definable conditions, can have a greater genetic payoff and
therefore how genes that foster such behavior could be
favored by evolution. 

The sense of fairness discovered in the capuchin monkeys
seems to be another aspect of the innate primate repertory
of social behaviors. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/18/science/18MONK.html?ex=1064892053&ei=1&en=6ed2951bf4f7c90b


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