Chimpanzees use social information to acquire a skill they fail to innovate
Publication date
2024
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
cc_by
Abstract
Cumulative cultural evolution has been claimed to be a uniquely human phenomenon pivotal to the biological success of our species. One plausible condition for cumulative cultural evolution to emerge is individuals’ ability to use social learning to acquire know-how that they cannot easily innovate by themselves. It has been suggested that chimpanzees may be capable of such know-how social learning, but this assertion remains largely untested. Here we show that chimpanzees use social learning to acquire a skill that they failed to independently innovate. By teaching chimpanzees how to solve a sequential task (one chimpanzee in each of the two tested groups, n = 66) and using network-based diffusion analysis, we found that 14 naive chimpanzees learned to operate a puzzle box that they failed to operate during the preceding three months of exposure to all necessary materials. In conjunction, we present evidence for the hypothesis that social learning in chimpanzees is necessary and sufficient to acquire a new, complex skill after the initial innovation.
Keywords
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Social Psychology, Behavioral Neuroscience
Citation
van Leeuwen, EJC, Detroy, SE, Haun, DBM & Call, J 2024, 'Chimpanzees use social information to acquire a skill they fail to innovate', Nature Human Behaviour, vol. 8, no. 5, pp. 891-902. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-024-01836-5