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To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: vhorner@emory.edu or dewaal@emory.edu.

Contributed by Frans B. M. de Waal, July 8, 2011 (sent for review May 2, 2011)

Author contributions: V.H., J.D.C., and F.B.M.d.W. designed research; V.H. and J.D.C. performed research; V.H., J.D.C., M.S., and F.B.M.d.W. analyzed data; and V.H., M.S., and F.B.M.d.W. wrote the paper.

Subject:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by the Living Links Center, Emory's College of Arts and Sciences, and by Base Grant RR-00165 from the National Institutes of Health to the YNPRC.

Keywords:

  • other-regarding
  • fairness
  • great ape

Spontaneous prosocial choice by chimpanzees

Tools:

Journal Title:

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Volume:

Volume 108, Number 33

Publisher:

, Pages 13847-13851

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

The study of human and primate altruism faces an evolutionary anomaly: There is ample evidence for altruistic preferences in our own species and growing evidence in monkeys, but one of our closest relatives, the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), is viewed as a reluctant altruist, acting only in response to pressure and solicitation. Although chimpanzee prosocial behavior has been reported both in observational captive studies and in the wild, thus far Prosocial Choice Tests have failed to produce evidence. However, methodologies of previous Prosocial Choice Tests may have handicapped the apes unintentionally. Here we present findings of a paradigm in which chimpanzees chose between two differently colored tokens: one “selfish” token resulting in a reward for the actor only (1/0), and the other “prosocial” token rewarding both the actor and a partner (1/1). Seven female chimpanzees, each tested with three different partners, showed a significant bias for the prosocial option. Prosocial choices occurred both in response to solicitation by the partner and spontaneously without solicitation. However, directed requests and pressure by the partner reduced the actor's prosocial tendency. These results draw into question previous conclusions indicating that chimpanzees have a limited sensitivity to the needs of others and behave prosocially only in response to significant prompting.

Copyright information:

Beginning with articles submitted in Volume 106 (2009) the author(s) retains copyright to individual articles, and the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America retains an exclusive license to publish these articles and holds copyright to the collective work.

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