1 Department of Psychology, University of Michigan.
2 Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan.
Psychol Sci. 2018 Nov;29(11):1832-1845. doi: 10.1177/0956797618800042. Epub 2018 Oct 8.
Large-scale cooperation is a hallmark of our species and appears to be unique among primates. Yet the evolutionary mechanisms that drove the emergence of humanlike patterns of cooperation remain unclear. Studying the cognitive processes underlying cooperative behavior in apes, our closest living relatives, can help identify these mechanisms. Accordingly, we employed a novel test battery to assess the willingness of 40 chimpanzees to donate resources, instrumentally help others, and punish a culpable thief. We found that chimpanzees were faster to make prosocial than selfish choices and that more prosocial individuals made the fastest responses. Further, two measures of self-control did not predict variation in prosocial responding, and individual performance across cooperative tasks did not covary. These results show that chimpanzees and humans share key cognitive processes for cooperation, despite differences in the scope of their cooperative behaviors.
大规模合作是人类的显著特征,似乎在灵长类动物中也是独一无二的。然而,推动人类合作模式出现的进化机制仍不清楚。研究我们最亲近的灵长类动物——猿类的合作行为的认知过程,可以帮助我们确定这些机制。因此,我们采用了一种新的测试组合来评估 40 只黑猩猩捐赠资源、为他人提供工具帮助和惩罚有罪小偷的意愿。我们发现,黑猩猩在做出亲社会选择时比自私选择更快,而更具亲社会倾向的个体反应速度更快。此外,两项自我控制措施并不能预测亲社会反应的变化,合作任务中的个体表现也没有相关性。这些结果表明,尽管黑猩猩和人类的合作行为范围不同,但它们共享合作的关键认知过程。