Karg Katja, Schmelz Martin, Call Josep, Tomasello Michael
Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany,
Anim Cogn. 2015 Sep;18(5):1069-76. doi: 10.1007/s10071-015-0875-z. Epub 2015 May 12.
Humans often strategically manipulate the informational access of others to their own advantage. Although chimpanzees know what others can and cannot see, it is unclear whether they can strategically manipulate others' visual access. In this study, chimpanzees were given the opportunity to save food for themselves by concealing it from a human competitor and also to get more food for themselves by revealing it to a human cooperator. When knowing that a competitor was approaching, chimpanzees kept more food hidden (left it covered) than when expecting a cooperator to approach. When the experimenter was already at the location of the hidden food, they actively revealed less food to the competitor than to the cooperator. They did not actively hide food (cover up food in the open) from the competitor, however. Chimpanzees thus strategically manipulated what another could see in order to maximize their payoffs and showed their ability to plan for future situations.
人类常常出于自身利益进行策略性地操控他人获取信息的机会。尽管黑猩猩知道其他个体能看到什么和看不到什么,但它们是否能策略性地操控其他个体的视觉获取尚不清楚。在本研究中,给予黑猩猩机会,让它们通过向人类竞争者隐藏食物来为自己保存食物,也通过向人类合作者展示食物来为自己获取更多食物。当知道竞争者靠近时,黑猩猩比预期合作者靠近时隐藏更多食物(使其处于被覆盖状态)。当实验者已在隐藏食物的位置时,相较于合作者,它们向竞争者主动展示的食物更少。然而,它们不会主动向竞争者隐藏食物(将露天的食物盖住)。因此,黑猩猩会策略性地操控其他个体能看到的东西,以实现自身收益最大化,并展现出为未来情况做规划的能力。