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. 2008 Dec 23;4(6):638-40.
doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0410.

Helping behaviour and regard for others in capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella)

Affiliations

Helping behaviour and regard for others in capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella)

Jennifer L Barnes et al. Biol Lett. .

Abstract

Altruism is an evolutionary puzzle. To date, much debate has focused on whether helping others without regard to oneself is a uniquely human behaviour, with a variety of empirical studies demonstrating a lack of altruistic behaviour in chimpanzees even when the demands of behaving altruistically seem minimal. By contrast, a recent experiment has demonstrated that chimpanzees will help a human experimenter to obtain an out-of-reach object, irrespective of whether or not they are offered a reward for doing so, suggesting that the cognitions underlying altruistic behaviour may be highly sensitive to situational demands. Here, we examine the cognitive demands of other-regarding behaviour by testing the conditions under which primates more distantly related to humans--capuchin monkeys--help an experimenter to obtain an out-of-reach object. Like chimpanzees, capuchin monkeys helped human experimenters even in the absence of a reward, but capuchins systematically failed to take into account the perspective of others when they stood to obtain food for themselves. These results suggest an important role for perspective taking and inhibition in altruistic behaviour and seem to reflect a significant evolutionary development in the roots of altruism, and specifically in other-regarding behaviour, between the divergence of New World monkeys and apes.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A representation of the experimental set-up in experiments (a) 1 and (b) 2. In both experiments the recipient human experimenter (R) reached for an out-of-reach toy which the subject monkey (S) could access.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Results of experiment 2. The percentage of capuchins' helping behaviour in a given session across reach/no reach and reward/no reward conditions.

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