Morality: It's not just for humans
 
By Elizabeth Landau, CNN
updated 10:49 AM EST, Sat January 19,  2013


 
 
 
Lawrenceville, Georgia (CNN) -- You might recognize  prominent 
primatologist Frans de Waal from lectures he has given about his  research on 
primate 
behavior, which have been popularized on YouTube. 
His face is familiar to  chimpanzees, too; some chimps that he knew as 
babies still recognize him even  after decades apart, he said. 
"Chimpanzees have the advantage  that you cannot ask them questions, so you 
have to watch (their) behavior to see  what they do," says de Waal, 
director of Emory University's Living Links Center,  in his Dutch-accented 
voice 
that is both gentle and authoritative. 
He adds, with dry humor: "With  humans, you can ask questions and you get 
all sorts of answers I don't trust, so  I prefer to work with chimpanzees for 
that reason." 

_Living Links_ (http://www.emory.edu/LIVING_LINKS/)  is part  of the oldest 
and largest primate center in the United States: _The Yerkes  National 
Primate Research Center_ (http://www.yerkes.emory.edu/animals/index.html) , a 
secluded grassy area in suburban Atlanta  where humans work in office trailers 
and other animals play in open-air  compounds. 
De Waal, who has been at the  center for more than 20 years, has made a 
career out of finding links between  primate and human behavior, particularly 
in the areas of morality and  empathy. 
You might think of "morality" as  special for humans, but there are 
elements of it that are found in the animal  kingdom, says de Waal -- namely, 
fairness and reciprocity. _His latest study_ 
(http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/01/09/1220806110.abstract) , published 
this week in the journal  
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that chimpanzees may  
show some of the same sensibility about fairness that humans do. 
The popular belief that the  natural world is based on competition is a 
simplification, de Waal says. The  strength of one's immune system, and the 
ability to find food, are also crucial.  And many animals survive by 
cooperating. 
"The struggle for life is not  necessarily literally a struggle," he said. 
"Humans are a highly cooperative  species, and we can see in our close 
relatives where that comes from." 
Mammals such as wolves, orcas  and elephants need their groups to survive, 
and empathy and cooperation are  survival mechanisms. De Waal discusses 
these mechanisms in his 2009 book "The  Age of Empathy: Nature's Lessons for a 
Kinder Society." 
"We think that empathy evolved  to take care of others that you need to 
take care of, especially, of course,  between mother and offspring, which is 
universal in all the mammals," de Waal  said. 
What it means to be  fair 
De Waal isn't sure that his  monkeys have what a philosopher would call a 
"concept of justice" in an  intellectual sense. But the emotional reactions 
researchers have observed  indicates that there is, at a more basic level, a 
sense of justice among  them. 
Among the questions he  investigates: If an animal gets more than another, 
is there is a feeling that  this is somehow unjust? And if one shares food 
with another, is there an  expectation of returning the favor? 
In a _2008  study_ (http://www.pnas.org/content/105/36/13685.short) , de 
Waal and colleagues put two capuchin monkeys side by side and gave  them a 
simple task to complete: Giving a rock to the experimenter. They were  given 
cucumbers as a reward for executing the task, and the monkeys obliged. But  if 
one of the monkeys was given grapes, something interesting happened: 
As observed in a popular video  that de Waal _showed in his TED talk_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcJxRqTs5nk) , after receiving the first piece 
of 
 cucumber, the capuchin monkey gives the experimenter a rock as expected. 
But  upon seeing that the other monkey has grapes, the capuchin monkey throws 
the  next piece of cucumber that it is given back at the researcher. 
Like children, the monkeys feel  they "need to get the same thing as 
somebody else," de Waal said. 
Based on experiments such as  these, de Waal came to believe that the sense 
of fairness observed in monkeys is  egocentric. The capuchin monkeys were 
upset, selfishly, when they didn't get the  grapes that their neighbors 
received. De Waal believed this model of fairness  would apply to chimpanzees 
also. Chimpanzees are so closely related to us that  they share 99% of their 
DNA with humans. 
But the new study, which  compares chimpanzees to young children, makes de 
Waal rethink that view. 
"Now with this experiment, we  are thinking that they have a higher level, 
where they worry about reward  division in general," he said, "and it's now 
unclear how they differ from  humans." 
The new study: A human  sense of fairness? 
In the new study, de Waal and  colleagues had chimpanzees and, separately, 
young children, play an "ultimatum  game." This is "the gold standard of 
fairness for humans" because it has been  played all over the world, by people 
in different cultures, to show that,  universally, humans appear to have a 
sense of fairness. 
The basic structure of an  ultimatum game is that there are rewards that 
can be divided between two  individuals. One proposes how to divide them and 
the other accepts or rejects  this offer. If the receiver rejects, no rewards 
are given out. 
Human trials have shown that  people usually propose a generous division of 
the goodies, such as half and half  or 60% and 40%, de Waal said. 
In the version used in the new  experiment, six adult chimpanzees and 20 
human children, between ages 2 and 7,  participated. 
The setup was such that a token  could be traded for equal rewards for both 
partners, and a token that would give  more goodies to the partner who made 
the choice. 
In some trials, one partner  proposes a reward division to the other via a 
token, and the receiver must  accept the token in order for both parties to 
get rewards. In others, the  partner's acceptance is not required. 
The researchers found that  chimpanzees and children both tended to make 
decisions about splitting rewards  similarly to adult humans. In the situation 
where the responder could accept or  reject the division of rewards, both 
chimpanzees and children tended to split  the rewards with their partners. 
But when the partner was not given the  opportunity to reject the proposal, 
chimps and kids tended to choose the selfish  arrangement -- a token that 
favored the chooser. 
Controversial  results 
So, does this mean that  chimpanzees show the same sense of fairness as 
humans? Keith Jensen of the  University of Manchester, who has conducted 
similar experiments in the past,  isn't so sure. His results did not show that 
chimpanzees have a sense of  fairness. 
Jensen is concerned about the  results of this new study because it's not 
clear that the responders knew that  they could reject offers. None of the p
articipants, human or chimp, ever  rejected the offers of their partners. 
"The fact that responders never  rejected nonzero offers suggests that they 
were not sensitive to unfairness but  were only motivated by getting food 
for themselves, regardless of the intentions  of the proposers or the 
consequences for them," he said in an e-mail. 
But de Waal said that responders  did display negative reactions in 
response to some offers. Chimps would spit  water and the children would say 
something like "You're getting more than me" in  response to a selfish offer. 
"That indicates that they know what's going on," he  said. 
Jensen also criticized the  design of the experiment because participants 
were primarily interacting with  the researchers, not each other. Although 
one chimp had to pass a token to the  other, this could be just a necessary 
step to get food, not a sign of agreement  with the offer, he said. But de 
Waal stands by the study. 
There are very few studies of  this nature on chimpanzees compared to in 
humans, and more research should be  done to explore the nature of the sense 
of fairness of human relatives. 
The secret lives  of primates 
There's still a lot that humans  don't know about their close relatives. 
De Waal has made some  fascinating inroads, however, including a study 
showing that chimpanzees can  look at the behind of another chimpanzee and 
match 
it to the corresponding face,  provided it's a chimp they know. This shows 
that the chimps have "whole-body  knowledge," a concept that has not been 
rigorously tested in humans, he said.  The research won him a 2012 Ig Nobel 
prize, honoring research that is both  humorous and thought-provoking, shared 
with Jennifer Pokorny. 
And he _has also studied yawn contagion_ 
(http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0018283) , the 
phenomenon of one person  yawning 
in response to another person's yawn. Those who are sensitive to yawns  
tend to be more empathetic people, and friends and family members yawn more 
with  each other than with strangers. This has also been shown in chimpanzees, 
who  will yawn if another chimp they know yawns too. 
But de Waal isn't sure, for  instance, why three females were patrolling 
their compound when CNN visited in  October. Males, though, have a clear 
purpose in patrolling: In the wild, they do  it to protect their territory, de 
Waal said. Perhaps, he postulates, the females  are mimicking the males. 
Chimp males compete with each  other regularly, but also come together to 
repair their relationships, de Waal  said. This pattern of behavior is seen 
in human families and in the workplace --  these cycles of one-upmanship and 
reconciliation. 
"There are many animals who are  very good at cooperation, and I'm 
personally not convinced that we humans are  necessarily best at that, but we 
are 
very good at it, that's for sure." 
His next book, coming out this  spring, is called "The Bonobo and the 
Atheist: In Search of Humanism Among the  Primates," which brings together 
evidence that there are biological roots in  human fairness and addresses the 
role 
of religion in society.
 

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