AI Article Synopsis

  • In certain species, like humans and possibly bonobos, feeling threatened by outgroups can lead to stronger bonds within their own group.
  • A study tested this idea in bonobos by observing their behavior in response to unfamiliar vocal sounds from outgroups, finding that they engaged in more social grooming when faced with these outgroup cues.
  • The results hint at a shared ancestral behavior of forming ingroup cohesion in response to outgroup threats, even before humans and bonobos evolved separately.

Article Abstract

In a number of species, including humans, perceived outgroup threat can promote ingroup cohesion. However, the distribution and selection history of this association across species with varied intergroup relations remains unclear. Using a sample of 8 captive groups (N = 43 individuals), we here tested whether bonobos, like chimpanzees, show more affiliative ingroup behaviour following perception of outgroup cues (unfamiliar male long-distance vocalisations). We used comparable methods to our previous study of captive chimpanzees, and found that, although weaker, there was an association for more frequent social grooming in response to the outgroup condition than the control condition, alongside more alert posture and increased self-directed behaviour. This provides preliminary evidence for an ancestral origin to the proximate association between outgroup cues and ingroup cohesion, at least prior to the Pan-Homo split, and suggests the presence of intergroup competition in our last common ancestor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11338468PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0307975PLOS

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