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Wild primates copy higher-ranked individuals in a social transmission experiment

Biology

Wild primates copy higher-ranked individuals in a social transmission experiment

C. Canteloup, W. Hoppitt, et al.

This fascinating study by Charlotte Canteloup, William Hoppitt, and Erica van de Waal explores how wild vervet monkeys socially learn novel foraging techniques through interactive experiments. Discover how their rank influences learning from each other and the surprising absence of biases based on age, sex, or kinship!... show more
Abstract
Little is known about how multiple social learning strategies interact and how organisms integrate both individual and social information. Here we combine, in a wild primate, an open diffusion experiment with a modeling approach: Network-Based Diffusion Analysis using a dynamic observation network. The vervet monkeys we study were not provided with a trained model; instead they had access to eight foraging boxes that could be opened in either of two ways. We report that individuals socially learn the techniques they observe in others. After having learnt one option, individuals are 31x more likely to subsequently asocially learn the other option than individuals naïve to both options. We discover evidence of a rank transmission bias favoring learning from higher-ranked individuals, with no evidence for age, sex or kin bias. This fine-grained analysis highlights a rank transmission bias in a field experiment mimicking the diffusion of a behavioral innovation.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 27, 2020
Authors
Charlotte Canteloup, William Hoppitt, Erica van de Waal
Tags
social learning
foraging behavior
vervet monkeys
rank transmission bias
behavioral ecology
open diffusion experiment
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