. Earth Science News .




.
ABOUT US
Children prefer cooperation
by Staff Writers
Munich, Germany (SPX) Oct 18, 2011

Cooperation is child's play: children that are presented with a task that they could perform on their own or with a partner show a preference to cooperate. Photo courtesy MPI for Evolutionary Anthropology.

Recent studies have shown that chimpanzees possess many of the cognitive prerequisites necessary for humanlike collaboration. Cognitive abilities, however, might not be all that differs between chimpanzees and humans when it comes to cooperation.

Researchers from the MPI for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig and the MPI for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen have now discovered that when all else is equal, human children prefer to work together in solving a problem, rather than solve it on their own.

Chimpanzees, on the other hand, show no such preference according to a study of 3-year-old German kindergarteners and semi-free ranging chimpanzees, in which the children and chimps could choose between a collaborative and a non-collaboration problem-solving approach.

Human societies are built on collaboration. From a young age, children will recognize the need for help, actively recruit collaborators, make agreements on how to proceed, and recognize the roles of their peers to ensure success.

Chimpanzees are cooperative too, working together in border patrols and group hunting, for instance. Still, humans might have greater motivation to cooperate than chimpanzees do."

A preference for doing things together instead of alone differentiates humans from one of our closely related primate cousins," says Daniel Haun of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany and the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

"We expected to find differences between human and chimpanzee cooperation, because humans cooperate in a larger variety of contexts and in more complex forms than chimpanzees."

The research team presented 3-year-old German children and chimpanzees living in a Congo Republic sanctuary with a task that they could perform on their own or with a partner.

Specifically, they could either pull two ends of a rope themselves in order to get a food reward or they could pull one end while a companion pulled the other.

The task was carefully controlled to ensure there were no obvious incentives for the children or chimpanzees to choose one strategy over the other. "In such a highly controlled situation, children showed a preference to cooperate; chimpanzees did not", Haun points out.

The children cooperated more than 78 percent of the time compared to about 58 percent for the chimpanzees. These statistics show that the children actively chose to work together, while chimps appeared to choose between their two options randomly.

"Our findings suggest that behavioral differences between humans and other species might be rooted in apparently small motivational differences", says Haun.

Future work should compare cooperative motivation across primate species in an effort to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the trait, the researchers say.

"Especially interesting would be other cooperative-breeding primates, or our other close relatives, the bonobos, who have both previously been argued to closely match some of the human pro-social motivations," says Yvonne Rekers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and first author of the study.

Related Links
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



ABOUT US
Differences in jet lag severity could be rooted in how circadian clock sets itself
Seattle WA (SPX) Oct 18, 2011
It's no secret that long-distance, west-to-east air travel - Seattle to Paris, for example - can raise havoc with a person's sleep and waking patterns, and that the effects are substantially less pronounced when traveling in the opposite direction. Now researchers, including a University of Washington biologist, have found hints that differing molecular processes in an area of the brain kn ... read more


ABOUT US
A team for an emergency

Fukushima city begins decontamination of homes

Gas blast kills 11 miners in north China: Xinhua

Radioactive emissions from Fukushima plant fall: TEPCO

ABOUT US
IBM stock sags on revenue target miss

Samsung seeks iPhone sales ban in Japan, Australia

A hidden order unraveled

RIM out to rev up BlackBerry with new apps

ABOUT US
Researchers explore plankton's shifting role in deep sea carbon storage

Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years

US rivers and streams saturated with carbon

War-damaged power cable cuts Tripoli water supply

ABOUT US
CryoSat rocking and rolling

US probes mystery disease killing Arctic seals

NASA Continues Critical Survey of Antarctica's Changing Ice

Research shows how life might have survived 'snowball Earth'

ABOUT US
Southern Africian farmers using fertilizer trees to improve food security

Chinese man charged in theft of US trade secrets

S Africa to release report on Iraq's oil-for-food

Method of studying roots rarely used in wetlands improves ecosystem research

ABOUT US
Earthquakes generate big heat in super-small areas

Russian Ship Finds Tsunami Debris where Scientists Predicted

Central America toll from rains climbs above 90

Wary Bangkok bolsters flood barriers

ABOUT US
Kenyan forces advance on strategic Somali rebel bases

Car bomb rocks Mogadishu during Kenyan ministers visit

Kenyan forces hunt militants deep inside Somalia

Planned Tanzanian soda ash plant threatens flamingoes

ABOUT US
Children prefer cooperation

Differences in jet lag severity could be rooted in how circadian clock sets itself

100,000-year-old ochre toolkit and workshop discovered in South Africa

Children, not chimps, choose collaboration


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement