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Responses of chimpanzees to cues of conspecific observation. | LitMetric

Responses of chimpanzees to cues of conspecific observation.

Anim Behav

Centre for Behaviour and Evolution & Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Newcastle, U.K.

Published: September 2013

Recent evidence has shown that humans are remarkably sensitive to artificial cues of conspecific observation when making decisions with potential social consequences. Whether similar effects are found in other great apes has not yet been investigated. We carried out two experiments in which individual chimpanzees, , took items of food from an array in the presence of either an image of a large conspecific face or a scrambled control image. In experiment 1 we compared three versions of the face image varying in size and the amount of the face displayed. In experiment 2 we compared a fourth variant of the image with more prominent coloured eyes displayed closer to the focal chimpanzee. The chimpanzees did not look at the face images significantly more than at the control images in either experiment. Although there were trends for some individuals in each experiment to be slower to take high-value food items in the face conditions, these were not consistent or robust. We suggest that the extreme human sensitivity to cues of potential conspecific observation may not be shared with chimpanzees.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3763378PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.06.015DOI Listing

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