http://www.brightsurf.com/news/headlines/view.article.php?ArticleID=20668

Chimpanzees are social conformists

August 22, 2005


Research being published today by Nature (21 August) suggests that humans
are not alone in wanting to conform and be like their neighbours but that
chimpanzees also have an innate desire to be like everyone else.

Researchers at St Andrews University, funded by the Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), with international
collaborators at Emory University in Atlanta, have demonstrated that
chimpanzee communities have developed their own particular traditions by
copying other members of their species - and that chimpanzees have a bias
towards social conformity that has previously been considered to be a
unique hallmark of human culture.

During the study the researchers artificially spread different habits
among separate groups of chimpanzees at Emory University’s Yerkes National
Primate Research Center. They presented two groups of chimpanzees with
identical problems but different solutions. The situation was something
wild chimpanzees would face often; a tasty food item was placed just out
of reach, behind a blockage in a network of pipes. A chimpanzee from each
group was taught a different way to use a stick to reach the food. Erika
was taught to use the tool to lift the blockage so the food would fall
towards her while Georgia was taught to use the stick to prod the blockage
until it pushed the food backwards so it rolled down another pipe and into
her hand.

Erika and Georgia were then reunited with their respective groups and
began applying their new skills to food stuck in the pipes. The other
chimpanzees proved to be attentive learners and observed their group
‘expert’ and were soon using the particular technique they had watched to
obtain the food from the pipes themselves.

Professor Andrew Whiten, the research leader from St Andrews, explained,
"The chimpanzees in each group gathered around their respective expert and
observed the technique they were using. They were quick to apply this
themselves, in contrast to a third group of chimpanzees who did not have
the benefit of an expert colleague and were not able to solve the pipe
problem themselves."

The lifting technique Ericka had been taught spread in her group and the
poking technique spread in Georgia’s group. When the researchers tested
the groups again two months later the difference in group traditions was
still in place. However, unexpectedly when some chimpanzees independently
discovered the method that their expert had not been taught, they
abandoned it and reverted to the norms of their group.

Professor Whiten said, "This is the first experimental evidence for the
spread and maintenance of traditions in any primate and it makes it likely
that differences in tool use between wild chimpanzee communities in Africa
indeed reflect a simple form of culture. The evidence that the chimpanzees
knew the alternative methods but reverted to the conventions of their
group shows a level of conformity that has only previously been seen in
our own species."



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
<font face=arial size=-1><a 
href="http://us.ard.yahoo.com/SIG=12h01oqpr/M=362335.6886444.7839734.2575449/D=groups/S=1705034827:TM/Y=YAHOO/EXP=1124838192/A=2894362/R=0/SIG=138c78jl6/*http://www.networkforgood.org/topics/arts_culture/?source=YAHOO&cmpgn=GRP&RTP=http://groups.yahoo.com/";>What
 would our lives be like without music, dance, and theater?Donate or volunteer 
in the arts today at Network for Good</a>.</font>
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/scifinoir2/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to