AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the coordination abilities of 4-year-old children and chimpanzees in a simple decision-making task involving a puzzle box.
  • Both species could coordinate successfully, but children were quicker and more adaptable with new partners, indicating a better understanding of the coordination process.
  • In contrast, chimpanzees took longer to agree on a solution and relied on previous successful choices, suggesting humans have evolved superior skills for collaborative decision-making.

Article Abstract

One of the challenges of collaboration is to coordinate decisions with others, and recent theories have proposed that humans, in particular, evolved skills to address this challenge. To test this hypothesis, we compared the coordination abilities of 4-year-old children and chimpanzees with a simple coordination problem. To retrieve a reward from a "puzzle box," pairs of individuals were simply required to choose the same 1 of 4 options. If successful, they each received the same reward, so there were no conflicts of interest. Individuals were paired with multiple partners over time. Both species were able to coordinate, but there were marked differences in the way they did so. Children were able to coordinate quickly and flexibly, adjusting easily to new partners, suggesting an understanding of the coordination process. In contrast, chimpanzees took time to converge on a single solution with each new partner, with no gains across partners, suggesting that their coordination was based only on repeating successful past choices. Together, these results support the hypothesis that humans have evolved unique skills for coordinating decisions and actions with others in the pursuit of common interests. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/com0000220DOI Listing

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