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Prosocial or photo preferences? Gorillas' prosocial choices using a touchscreen

Three male Western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) were given the opportunity to select their own or conspecific photos on a touchscreen to indicate whether they wished the experimenter to deliver a food reward only to them or to them and the selected conspecific(s). This is only the seco...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American journal of primatology 2024-05, Vol.86 (5), p.e23612-n/a
Main Author: Vonk, Jennifer
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Three male Western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) were given the opportunity to select their own or conspecific photos on a touchscreen to indicate whether they wished the experimenter to deliver a food reward only to them or to them and the selected conspecific(s). This is only the second symbolic test of prosocial preferences with apes using a touchscreen, and the first with gorillas. The use of self and other photographs as symbols of prosocial choices was intuitive while controlling for the distraction of visible food rewards, and allowing for tests of transfer to further validate apparent prosocial intentions. Gorillas rapidly learned to avoid selecting a photograph of an empty enclosure that resulted in no rewards for any of the gorillas and transferred this learning to a novel photograph. The gorillas did not behave in a consistently self‐interested or prosocial manner but they clearly rejected the opportunity to choose spitefully. Their preferences for certain photographs did not necessarily reflect a preference to be prosocial toward that particular individual because these preferences did not transfer to novel photographs of the same individuals. The results call into question whether gorillas recognize themselves and conspecifics in photographs but cannot conclusively speak to whether gorillas have prosocial preferences. They do stress the importance of carefully probing alternative explanations when inferring intentions from observable behaviors. Gorillas' choices of each Gorilla's photo across phases. Highlights   This is the first study of prosocial preferences where subjects selected photographs of recipients on a touchscreen. Gorillas did not make primarily self‐interested or spiteful choices but they did not make consistently prosocial choices. Gorillas had preferences for particular photographs but preferences to reward particular recipients did not transfer across photographs. Gorillas may not have recognized their own images in photographs.
ISSN:0275-2565
1098-2345
DOI:10.1002/ajp.23612