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      Chimpanzees' behavioral flexibility, social tolerance, and use of tool-composites in a progressively challenging foraging problem

      research-article
      1 , 2 , 1 , 3 , 4 , 1 , 5 ,
      iScience
      Elsevier
      Biological Sciences, Animals, Ethology

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          Summary

          Behavioral flexibility is a critical ability allowing animals to respond to changes in their environment. Previous studies have found evidence of inflexibility when captive chimpanzees are faced with changing task parameters. We provided two groups of sanctuary-housed chimpanzees with a foraging task in which solutions were restricted over time. Initially, juice could be retrieved from within a tube by hand or by using tool materials, but effective solutions were then restricted by narrowing the tube, necessitating the abandonment of previous solutions and adoption of new ones. Chimpanzees responded flexibly, but one group increased their use of effective techniques to a greater extent than the other. Tool-composite techniques emerged in both groups, but primarily in the more flexible group. The more flexible group also showed higher rates of socio-positive behaviors at the task. In conjunction, these findings support the hypothesis that social tolerance may facilitate the emergence and spread of novel behaviors.

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          Highlights

          • Chimpanzees adapted their tool use to a change in foraging constraints

          • Groups differed significantly in the level of behavioral flexibility observed

          • The more flexible group showed higher rates of socio-positive behaviors at the task

          • Tool-composite techniques were observed, primarily in the more flexible group

          Abstract

          Biological Sciences; Animals; Ethology

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          Most cited references88

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          Cultural learning

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            Late Pleistocene demography and the appearance of modern human behavior.

            The origins of modern human behavior are marked by increased symbolic and technological complexity in the archaeological record. In western Eurasia this transition, the Upper Paleolithic, occurred about 45,000 years ago, but many of its features appear transiently in southern Africa about 45,000 years earlier. We show that demography is a major determinant in the maintenance of cultural complexity and that variation in regional subpopulation density and/or migratory activity results in spatial structuring of cultural skill accumulation. Genetic estimates of regional population size over time show that densities in early Upper Paleolithic Europe were similar to those in sub-Saharan Africa when modern behavior first appeared. Demographic factors can thus explain geographic variation in the timing of the first appearance of modern behavior without invoking increased cognitive capacity.
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              Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture.

              Some researchers have claimed that chimpanzee and human culture rest on homologous cognitive and learning mechanisms. While clearly there are some homologous mechanisms, we argue here that there are some different mechanisms at work as well. Chimpanzee cultural traditions represent behavioural biases of different populations, all within the species' existing cognitive repertoire (what we call the 'zone of latent solutions') that are generated by founder effects, individual learning and mostly product-oriented (rather than process-oriented) copying. Human culture, in contrast, has the distinctive characteristic that it accumulates modifications over time (what we call the 'ratchet effect'). This difference results from the facts that (i) human social learning is more oriented towards process than product and (ii) unique forms of human cooperation lead to active teaching, social motivations for conformity and normative sanctions against non-conformity. Together, these unique processes of social learning and cooperation lead to humans' unique form of cumulative cultural evolution.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                iScience
                iScience
                iScience
                Elsevier
                2589-0042
                05 January 2021
                19 February 2021
                05 January 2021
                : 24
                : 2
                : 102033
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, and Scottish Primate Research Group, School of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9JP, UK
                [2 ]Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Lausanne 1015, Switzerland
                [3 ]Behavioral Ecology and Ecophysiology Group, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, 2610 Wilrijk, Belgium
                [4 ]Centre for Research and Conservation, Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp, K. Astridplein 26, B 2018 Antwerp, Belgium
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author a.whiten@ 123456st-andrews.ac.uk
                [5]

                Lead contact

                Article
                S2589-0042(21)00001-8 102033
                10.1016/j.isci.2021.102033
                7820130
                33521600
                31d6c80e-66ba-40af-9145-6c0e8fd3324f
                © 2021 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 6 May 2020
                : 1 September 2020
                : 31 December 2020
                Categories
                Article

                biological sciences,animals,ethology
                biological sciences, animals, ethology

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