Majority-biased learning
In humans and chimpanzees knowledge is transmitted  within a group by means 
of a majority principle 

 
April 12, 2012 
The transmission of knowledge to the next generation is a  key feature of 
human evolution. In particular, humans tend to copy behaviour  that is 
demonstrated by many other individuals. Chimpanzees and orangutans, two  of our 
closest living relatives, also socially pass on traditional behaviour and  
culture from one generation to another. Whether and how this process resembles  
the human one is still largely unknown. Researchers of the Max Planck 
Institute  for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig and the Max Planck 
Institute 
for  Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen have now discovered that chimpanzees are 
more  likely to copy an action performed by a large number of individuals 
than an  action that was performed more frequently. Two-year old children 
consider both  the number of individuals and the frequency of the action 
demonstrated. For  orangutans, however, none of the factors play a role.  

 
In many animal species, behaviours and strategies are passed on from  
individuals to their conspecifics and potentially across groups by social  
learning. In chimpanzees and orangutans, whose behavioural repertoires differ  
from population to population, knowledge is also "transmitted" amongst  
individuals. In their current paper, researchers Daniel Haun, Yvonne Rekers and 
 
Michael Tomasello of the Max Planck Institutes for Evolutionary Anthropology 
and  Psycholinguistics show how human children and chimpanzees pass on 
knowledge  through social learning. 
Initially, the researchers wanted to find out whether children and apes are 
 more likely to copy a behaviour that has been demonstrated more often or 
one  that has been demonstrated by more individuals. In the relevant 
experimental  setting, 2-year-old children, chimpanzees and orangutans could 
receive 
a reward  from an apparatus consisting of three differently coloured 
subsections if they  dropped a ball into a hole. Four individuals then 
demonstrated an action: One  individual dropped a ball into the same section 
three 
times; the three others –  one after the other - dropped their balls into 
another section. Finally, the  observers were also asked to drop a ball into 
one 
of the three sections. The  result: Most of the chimpanzees and 16 children 
chose the section that the  majority of individuals had also chosen. 
Orangutans appeared to select a section  quite randomly. 
In the second part of the study, the researchers analysed whether the  
frequency with which a subsection was chosen by the demonstrators had an  
influence on the result. The set-up was similar to the previous test, with one  
exception: now it was only two children, chimpanzees or orangutans who  
demonstrated an action. One individual dropped three balls into one of the  
coloured subsections and for doing this received one reward per ball. The 
second  
demonstrator dropped one ball in a differently coloured section and received 
one  award. The result: Chimpanzees and orangutans seemed to choose 
randomly whereas  most of the children chose the subsection into which more 
balls 
had been  dropped. 
“Taking the results of the two studies together, chimpanzees seemed to  
consider the number of demonstrators more strongly than the number of  
demonstrations when deciding which information to extract from their social  
environment. Children considered both. Orangutans considered neither”, says  
Daniel 
Haun. Interestingly, children and chimpanzees copied the majority  
behaviour while orangutans did not. One possible explanation: Contrary to 
humans  
and chimpanzees, orangutans live together in loose group structures. Social  
learning beyond the mother-child-relationship might therefore not play an  
equally important role.

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