| Literature DB >> 31110278 |
Hagen Knofe1, Jan Engelmann2,3, Michael Tomasello4, Esther Herrmann5.
Abstract
Competition over scarce resources is common across the animal kingdom. Here we investigate the strategies of chimpanzees and children in a limited resource problem. Both species were presented with a tug-of-war apparatus in which each individual in a dyad received a tool to access a reward, but tools could not be used simultaneously. We assessed the equality of tool use as well as the frequency of turn taking. Both species managed to overcome this conflict of interest but used different strategies to do so. While there was substantial variation in chimpanzee behaviour, monopolization was the common course of action: tool use was asymmetric with individual chimpanzees monopolizing the resource. In children, turn-taking emerged as the dominant strategy: tool use was symmetric and children alternated access to the tool at a high rate. These results suggest that while both species possess strategies for solving limited resource problems, humans might have evolved species unique motivations and socio-cognitive skills for dealing with such conflicts of interest.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31110278 PMCID: PMC6527849 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44096-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic set-up for (a) chimpanzees and (b) children. (a) Two tools are tied to the same short rope, thereby preventing simultaneous access to the yogurt filled boxes. (b) Two stamps are tied to the same short rope, thereby preventing simultaneous access to the ink (which was needed to stamp the circles on the sheet). © Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
Figure 2Estimated inequality of tool use for both species on trial by trial basis (a) and across trials (b). Estimates are depicted by a long horizontal line. Whiskers represent the confidence intervals. Inequality of tool use theoretically ranges from 0.5 (equal tool use; indicated by the dashed line), to 1 (complete monopolization by one individual). Grey circles show the full distribution of the data. Bigger circles represent more data points.
Figure 3Estimated proportional turn-taking for chimpanzees and children. Estimates are depicted by a long horizontal line. Whiskers represent the confidence intervals. The proportional turn-taking scale theoretically ranges from 0 (no turn-taking) to 1 (taking turns after each tool use). Grey circles show the full distribution of the data. Bigger circles represent more data points.