Cardoso Raphael Moura, Ottoni Eduardo B
Graduate Program of Psychology, Pontifical Catholic University of Goiás, Goiania, Goiás, Brazil
Department of Experimental Psychology, Institute of Psychology, University of São Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Biol Lett. 2016 Nov;12(11). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2016.0604.
The effects of culture on individual cognition have become a core issue among cultural primatologists. Field studies with wild populations provide evidence on the role of social cues in the ontogeny of tool use in non-human primates, and on the transmission of such behaviours over generations through socially biased learning. Recent experimental studies have shown that cultural knowledge may influence problem solving in wild populations of chimpanzees. Here, we present the results from a field experiment comparing the performance of bearded capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus) from two wild savannah populations with distinct toolkits in a probing task. Only the population that already exhibited the customary use of probing tools succeeded in solving the new problem, suggesting that their cultural repertoire shaped their approach to the new task. Moreover, only this population, which uses stone tools in a broader range of contexts, tried to use them to solve the problem. Social interactions can affect the formation of learning sets and they affect the performance of the monkeys in problem solving. We suggest that behavioural traditions affect the ways non-human primates solve novel foraging problems using tools.
文化对个体认知的影响已成为文化灵长类动物学家关注的核心问题。对野生种群的实地研究为社会线索在非人类灵长类动物工具使用个体发育中的作用,以及此类行为通过社会偏向学习在代际间的传播提供了证据。最近的实验研究表明,文化知识可能会影响野生黑猩猩种群解决问题的能力。在此,我们展示了一项实地实验的结果,该实验比较了来自两个具有不同工具包的野生草原种群的卷尾猴(Sapajus libidinosus)在一项探测任务中的表现。只有已经习惯使用探测工具的种群成功解决了新问题,这表明它们的文化技能塑造了它们处理新任务的方式。此外,只有这个在更广泛情境中使用石器工具的种群尝试用它们来解决问题。社会互动会影响学习集的形成,并且会影响猴子解决问题的表现。我们认为行为传统会影响非人类灵长类动物使用工具解决新觅食问题的方式。