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Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) transfer tokens repeatedly with a partner to accumulate rewards in a self-control task

There has been extensive research investigating self-control in humans and nonhuman animals, yet we know surprisingly little about how one’s social environment influences self-control. The present study examined the self-control of chimpanzees in a task that required active engagement with conspecif...

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Published in:Animal cognition 2013-07, Vol.16 (4), p.627-636
Main Authors: Parrish, Audrey E., Perdue, Bonnie M., Evans, Theodore A., Beran, Michael J.
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description There has been extensive research investigating self-control in humans and nonhuman animals, yet we know surprisingly little about how one’s social environment influences self-control. The present study examined the self-control of chimpanzees in a task that required active engagement with conspecifics. The task consisted of transferring a token back and forth with a partner animal in order to accumulate food rewards, one item per token transfer. Self-control was required because at any point in the trial, either chimpanzee could obtain their accumulated rewards, but doing so discontinued the food accumulation and ended the trial for both individuals. Chimpanzees readily engaged the task and accumulated the majority of available rewards before ending each trial, and they did so across a number of conditions that varied the identity of the partner, the presence/absence of the experimenter, and the means by which they could obtain rewards. A second experiment examined chimpanzees’ self-control when given the choice between immediately available food items and a potentially larger amount of rewards that could be obtained by engaging the token transfer task with a partner. Chimpanzees were flexible in their decision-making in this test, typically choosing the option representing the largest amount of food, even if it involved delayed accumulation of the rewards via the token transfer task. These results demonstrate that chimpanzees can exhibit self-control in situations involving social interactions, and they encourage further research into this important aspect of the self-control scenario.
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language eng
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source Springer Nature
subjects Animal behavior
Animal cognition
Animal ethology
Animals
Behavioral Sciences
Biological and medical sciences
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Choice Behavior
Conspecifics
Female
Food
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Life Sciences
Male
Mammalia
Monkeys & apes
Original Paper
Pan troglodytes
Pan troglodytes - psychology
Psychology Research
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Reward
Social Behavior
Token Economy
Vertebrata
Zoology
title Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) transfer tokens repeatedly with a partner to accumulate rewards in a self-control task
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