Image scoring in great apes.

'Image scoring' occurs when person A monitors the giving behaviour of person B towards person C. We tested for 'image scoring' in chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans. Subjects passively observed two types of incident: (i) a 'nice' person gave grapes to a huma...

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Main Authors: Russell, Y, Call, J, Dunbar, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2008
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author Russell, Y
Call, J
Dunbar, R
author_facet Russell, Y
Call, J
Dunbar, R
author_sort Russell, Y
collection OXFORD
description 'Image scoring' occurs when person A monitors the giving behaviour of person B towards person C. We tested for 'image scoring' in chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans. Subjects passively observed two types of incident: (i) a 'nice' person gave grapes to a human beggar, and (ii) a 'nasty' person refused to give. The subject witnessed both incidents in succession (but was unable to obtain the grapes). Shortly after, the ape had an opportunity to approach one or both human actors (nice/nasty), both of whom were now sitting side-by-side holding grapes. However, neither human offered their grapes if approached. The subject's expectation of which human was more likely to offer food was measured by comparing the proportion of time that subjects spent near each person. Chimpanzees (n=17) spent significantly more time at the 'nice' window compared to 'nasty'. Also, preference for 'nasty' declined as trials progressed. Results for other apes were not significant.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1a2b9c2d-ee62-4e12-b47b-f5f1854832032022-03-26T10:53:16ZImage scoring in great apes.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1a2b9c2d-ee62-4e12-b47b-f5f185483203EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2008Russell, YCall, JDunbar, R'Image scoring' occurs when person A monitors the giving behaviour of person B towards person C. We tested for 'image scoring' in chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans. Subjects passively observed two types of incident: (i) a 'nice' person gave grapes to a human beggar, and (ii) a 'nasty' person refused to give. The subject witnessed both incidents in succession (but was unable to obtain the grapes). Shortly after, the ape had an opportunity to approach one or both human actors (nice/nasty), both of whom were now sitting side-by-side holding grapes. However, neither human offered their grapes if approached. The subject's expectation of which human was more likely to offer food was measured by comparing the proportion of time that subjects spent near each person. Chimpanzees (n=17) spent significantly more time at the 'nice' window compared to 'nasty'. Also, preference for 'nasty' declined as trials progressed. Results for other apes were not significant.
spellingShingle Russell, Y
Call, J
Dunbar, R
Image scoring in great apes.
title Image scoring in great apes.
title_full Image scoring in great apes.
title_fullStr Image scoring in great apes.
title_full_unstemmed Image scoring in great apes.
title_short Image scoring in great apes.
title_sort image scoring in great apes
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AT callj imagescoringingreatapes
AT dunbarr imagescoringingreatapes