| Literature DB >> 27725706 |
Stephanie Musgrave1, David Morgan2,3, Elizabeth Lonsdorf4, Roger Mundry5, Crickette Sanz1,3.
Abstract
Teaching is a form of high-fidelity social learning that promotes human cumulative culture. Although recently documented in several nonhuman animals, teaching is rare among primates. In this study, we show that wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes troglodytes) in the Goualougo Triangle teach tool skills by providing learners with termite fishing probes. Tool donors experienced significant reductions in tool use and feeding, while tool recipients significantly increased their tool use and feeding after tool transfers. These transfers meet functional criteria for teaching: they occur in a learner's presence, are costly to the teacher, and improve the learner's performance. Donors also showed sophisticated cognitive strategies that effectively buffered them against potential costs. Teaching is predicted when less costly learning mechanisms are insufficient. Given that these chimpanzees manufacture sophisticated, brush-tipped fishing probes from specific raw materials, teaching in this population may relate to the complexity of these termite-gathering tasks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27725706 PMCID: PMC5057084 DOI: 10.1038/srep34783
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Evidence for Animal Teaching.
| Defining Criteria | Meerkats | Ants | Pied Babblers | Macaques | Callitrichids | Felids | Chimpanzees | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional | Occurs in the presence of a naïve learner | |||||||
| At some cost or at least no benefit to teacher | ||||||||
| Facilitates learning in another individual | ||||||||
| Sensitivity to learner competence | ||||||||
| Ostensive cueing | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||
| Cognitive | Ability to attribute knowledge to others | — | — | — | ? | — | — | |
| Deliberate intention to facilitate learning | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||
Included are cases where evidence for satisfaction of teaching criteria is strong in either a captive or an experimental (E) or a natural (N) setting, or present but inconclusive (?); - indicates that there is presently no evidence for a criterion. The context of teaching behavior is indicated by; bold = foraging; italics = communication, and underlined = locomotion. Plain text indicates evidence derived from studies that did not specifically assess teaching criteria. More exhaustive coverage of evidence for possible cases of animal teaching is reviewed elsewhere891019. Chimpanzee data come from this study and the others referenced.
Figure 1Changes in termite gathering from before to after tool transfer.
The number of seconds spent using tools to gather termites decreased for the donor (n = 26, Fig. 1a) after relinquishing a probe to another chimpanzee (recipient, n = 24), whose time spent termite fishing increased (Fig. 1b). The number of fishing probe insertions also decreased for the donor (n = 17, Fig. 1c) and increased for the recipient (n = 15, Fig. 1d). Finally, the number of feeding events decreased for the donor (n = 15, Fig. 1e) and increased for the recipient (n = 14, Fig. 1f) after the transfers. Observations of the same individual or event, respectively, are denoted by a pair of points connected by a dashed line. Averages are shown for individuals with multiple observations. Tied observations (at least two individuals with the exact same value of the response) are denoted by larger points (whereby the area of the points codes the number of individuals; thicker lines have the corresponding meaning for the connections). n = number of transfers.