Animal behaviour: inequity aversion in capuchins?
- PMID: 15014487
- DOI: 10.1038/428139a
Animal behaviour: inequity aversion in capuchins?
Abstract
Brosnan and de Waal have shown that capuchin monkeys are more likely to reject a cucumber slice after seeing that another capuchin has received a more attractive grape. In interpreting this finding, the authors make a link to work in humans on 'inequity aversion' and suggest that capuchins, like humans, may reject rewards because they are averse to unequal pay-offs. Here I argue that this interpretation suffers from three problems: the results contradict the predictions of the inequity-aversion model that Bosnan and de Waal cite; experimental results indicate that humans do not behave like capuchins in similar circumstances; and the available evidence does not suggest that inequity aversion is cross-culturally universal.
Comment on
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Monkeys reject unequal pay.Nature. 2003 Sep 18;425(6955):297-9. doi: 10.1038/nature01963. Nature. 2003. PMID: 13679918
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