Primates expect others to act rationally
By Amy LaVoie
FAS Communications
When trying to understand someone’s intentions, nonhuman primates
expect others to act rationally by performing the most appropriate
action allowed by the environment, according to a new study by
researchers at Harvard University.
The findings appear in the Sept. 7 issue of the journal Science. The
work was led by Justin Wood, a graduate student in the Department of
Psychology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), with David Glynn,
a research assistant, and Marc Hauser, professor of psychology at
Harvard, along with Brenda Phillips of Boston University.
“A dominant view has been that nonhuman primates attend only to what
actions ‘look like’ when trying to understand what others are
thinking,” says Wood. “In contrast, our research shows that nonhuman
primates infer others’ intentions in a much more sophisticated way.
They expect other individuals to perform the most rational action that
they can, given the environmental obstacles that they face.”
The scientists studied the behavioral response of more than 120
primates, including cotton-top tamarins, rhesus macaques, and
chimpanzees. These species represent each of the three major groups of
primates: New World monkeys, Old World monkeys, and apes. All three
species were tested in the same way, and the results showed the same
responses among the different types.
In the first experiment, the primates were presented with two potential
food containers, and the experimenter either purposefully grasped one
of the containers or flopped a hand onto one of the containers in an
accidental manner. For all three species, the primates sought the food
container that was purposefully grasped a greater number of times than
the container upon which the hand was flopped. This indicates that the
primates inferred goal-oriented action on the part of the experimenter
when he grasped the container, and were able to understand the
difference between the goal-oriented and accidental behavior.
In the second experiment, the researchers asked if the primates infer
others’ goals under the expectation that other individuals will perform
the most rational action allowed by the environmental obstacles. Again,
the primates were presented with two potential food containers. In one
scenario, an experimenter touched a container with his elbow when his
hands were full, and in another scenario, touched a container with his
elbow when his hands were empty. The primates looked for the food in
the container indicated with the elbow more often when the
experimenter’s hands were full. The primates considered, just as a
human being would, that if someone’s hands are full then it is rational
for them to use their elbow to indicate the container with food,
whereas if their hands are empty it is not rational for them to use
their elbow, because they could have used their unoccupied hand.
Developmental psychologists have long understood that young children
are able to engage in this type of rational action perception, but
scientists have not understood whether this ability is unique to human
beings or is shared with other animals. This study suggests that this
ability evolved as long as 40 million years ago, with nonhuman
primates.
“This study represents one of the broadest comparative studies of
primate cognition, and the significance of the findings is reinforced
by the fact that these results were consistent across three different
species of primates,” says Wood. “The results have significant
implications for understanding the evolution of the processes that
allow us to make sense of other people’s behavior.”
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the National Science Federation.
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