(Press-News.org) Human tendency to adopt the behaviour of others when on their home territory has been found in non-human primates.
Researchers at the University of St Andrews observed 'striking' fickleness in male monkeys, when it comes to copying the behaviour of others in new groups.
The study has been hailed by leading primate experts as rare experimental proof of 'cultural transmission' in wild primates to date.
The findings could help explain the evolution of our human desire to seek out 'local knowledge' when visiting a new place or culture.
The new discovery was made by Dr Erica van de Waal and Professor Andrew Whiten of the University of St Andrews, along with Christèle Borgeaud of the University of Neuchâtel.
The research is published today (Thursday 25 April) by the journal Science.
Professor Whiten commented, "As the saying goes, 'When in Rome, do as the Romans do'. Our findings suggest that a willingness to conform to what all those around you are doing when you visit a different culture is a disposition shared with other primates."
The research was carried out by observing wild vervet monkeys in South Africa. The researchers originally set out to test how strongly wild vervet monkey infants are influenced by their mothers' habits.
But more interestingly, they found that adult males migrating to new groups conformed quickly to the social norms of their new neighbours, whether it made sense to them or not.
Professor Whiten commented, "The males' fickleness is certainly a striking discovery. At first sight their willingness to conform to local norms may seem a rather mindless response – but after all, it's how we humans often behave when we visit different cultures.
"It may make sense in nature, where the knowledge of the locals is often the best guide to what are the optimal behaviours in their environment, so copying them may actually make a lot of sense".
In the initial study, the researchers provided each of two groups of wild monkeys with a box of maize corn dyed pink and another dyed blue. The blue corn was made to taste repulsive and the monkeys soon learned to eat only pink corn. Two other groups were trained in this way to eat only blue corn.
A new generation of infants were later offered both colours of food – neither tasting badly – and the adult monkeys present appeared to remember which colour they had previously preferred.
Almost every infant copied the rest of the group, eating only the one preferred colour of corn.
The crucial discovery came when males began to migrate between groups during the mating season.
The researchers found that of the ten males who moved to groups eating a different coloured corn to the one they were used to, all but one switched to the new local norm immediately.
The one monkey who did not switch, was the top ranking in his new group who appeared unconcerned about adopting local behavior.
Dr van de Waal conducted the field experiments at the Inkawu Vervet Project in the Mawana private game reserve in South Africa. She became familiar with all 109 monkeys, making it possible for her to document the behaviour of the males who migrated to new groups.
She said, "The willingness of the immigrant males to adopt the local preference of their new groups surprised us all. The copying behaviour of both the new, naïve infants and the migrating males reveals the potency and importance of social learning in these wild primates, extending even to the conformity we know so well in humans."
Commenting on the research, leading primatologist Professor Frans de Waal, of the Yerkes Primate Center of Emory University, said that the study "is one of the few successful field experiments on cultural transmission to date, and a remarkably elegant one at that."
###
NOTE TO EDITORS:
THE RESEARCHERS ARE AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW*:
Dr Erica van de Waal: Tel – +41 (0) 22 342 62 69, mobile - +41 (0) 79 820 66 27 or email evdw@st-andrews.ac.uk
Professor Andrew Whiten: Tel +44 (0) 1334 462073, Mobile +41 (0)7817 368 637 or email aw2@st-andrews.ac.uk
*Both are in Switzerland Thurs 25 / Fri 26 April – use Swiss codes as above.
"Potent social learning and conformity shape a wild primate's foraging decisions" by Erica van de Waal, Christèle Borgeaud and Andrew Whiten is published in Science, Vol 340, Issue 6131, 2013, 25/26 April. Please contact the Science press package team at 202-326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org to receive an official version of the paper.
NB: Erica van de Waal and Frans de Waal are NOT related.
NOTE TO PICTURE EDITORS:
Photographs are available from the University of St Andrews Press Office and from the Science SciPak site.
Culture vultures
Monkeys found to conform to social norms
2013-04-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Ecology buys time for evolution
2013-04-26
Songbird populations can handle far more disrupting climate change than expected. Density-dependent processes are buying them time for their battle. But without (slow) evolutionary rescue it will not save them in the end, says an international team of scientists led by the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW) in Science this week.
Yes, spring started late this year in North-western Europe. But the general trend of the four last decades is still a rapidly advancing spring. The seasonal timing of trees and insects advance too, but songbirds like Parus major, or ...
Piezoelectric 'taxel' arrays convert motion to electronic signals for tactile imaging
2013-04-26
Using bundles of vertical zinc oxide nanowires, researchers have fabricated arrays of piezotronic transistors capable of converting mechanical motion directly into electronic controlling signals. The arrays could help give robots a more adaptive sense of touch, provide better security in handwritten signatures and offer new ways for humans to interact with electronic devices.
The arrays include more than 8,000 functioning piezotronic transistors, each of which can independently produce an electronic controlling signal when placed under mechanical strain. These touch-sensitive ...
The Earth's center is 1,000 degrees hotter than previously thought
2013-04-26
Grenoble, 26 April 2013: Scientists have determined the temperature near the Earth's centre to be 6000 degrees Celsius, 1000 degrees hotter than in a previous experiment run 20 years ago. These measurements confirm geophysical models that the temperature difference between the solid core and the mantle above, must be at least 1500 degrees to explain why the Earth has a magnetic field. The scientists were even able to establish why the earlier experiment had produced a lower temperature figure. The results are published on 26 April 2013 in Science.
The research team was ...
Vaterite: Crystal within a crystal helps resolve an old puzzle
2013-04-26
MADISON, Wis. – With the help of a solitary sea squirt, scientists have resolved the longstanding puzzle of the crystal structure of vaterite, an enigmatic geologic mineral and biomineral.
A form of calcium carbonate, vaterite can be found in Portland cement. Its quick transformation into other more stable forms of calcium carbonate when exposed to water helps make the cement hard and water resistant. As a biomineral, vaterite is found in such things as gallstones, fish otoliths, freshwater pearls, and the healed scars of some mollusk shells.
But unlike most minerals, ...
Einstein was right -- So far
2013-04-26
An international team has discovered an exotic double object that consists of a tiny, but unusually heavy neutron star that spins 25 times each second, orbited every two and a half hours by a white dwarf star. The neutron star is a pulsar that is giving off radio waves that can be picked up on Earth by radio telescopes. Although this unusual pair is very interesting in its own right it is also a unique laboratory for testing the limits of physical theories.
This pulsar is named PSR J0348+0432 and is the remains of a supernova
explosion. It is twice as heavy as the Sun, ...
Einstein's gravity theory passes toughest test yet
2013-04-26
A strange stellar pair nearly 7,000 light-years from Earth has provided physicists with a unique cosmic laboratory for studying the nature of gravity. The extremely strong gravity of a massive neutron star in orbit with a companion white dwarf star puts competing theories of gravity to a test more stringent than any available before.
Once again, Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, published in 1915, comes out on top.
At some point, however, scientists expect Einstein's model to be invalid under extreme conditions. General Relativity, for example, is incompatible ...
Missing link in Parkinson's disease found
2013-04-26
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have described a missing link in understanding how damage to the body's cellular power plants leads to Parkinson's disease and, perhaps surprisingly, to some forms of heart failure.
These cellular power plants are called mitochondria. They manufacture the energy the cell requires to perform its many duties. And while heart and brain tissue may seem entirely different in form and function, one vital characteristic they share is a massive need for fuel.
Working in mouse and fruit fly hearts, the researchers ...
Longer days bring 'winter blues' -- for rats, not humans
2013-04-26
Most of us are familiar with the "winter blues," the depression-like symptoms known as "seasonal affective disorder," or SAD, that occurs when the shorter days of winter limit our exposure to natural light and make us more lethargic, irritable and anxious. But for rats it's just the opposite.
Biologists at UC San Diego have found that rats experience more anxiety and depression when the days grow longer. More importantly, they discovered that the rat's brain cells adopt a new chemical code when subjected to large changes in the day and night cycle, flipping a switch to ...
Poor parenting -- including overprotection -- increases bullying risk
2013-04-26
Children who are exposed to negative parenting – including abuse, neglect but also overprotection – are more likely to experience childhood bullying by their peers, according to a meta-analysis of 70 studies of more than 200,000 children.
The research, led by the University of Warwick and published in the journal Child Abuse & Neglect, found the effects of poor parenting were stronger for children who are both a victim and perpetrator of bulling (bully-victims) than children who were solely victims.
It found that negative or harsh parenting was linked to a moderate increase ...
Breath study brings roadside drug testing closer
2013-04-26
A group of researchers from Sweden have provided further evidence that illegal drugs can be detected in the breath, opening up the possibility of a roadside breathalyzer test to detect substances such as cocaine, amphetamines and cannabis.
Using a simple, commercially available breath sampler, the researchers have successfully identified a range of 12 substances in the breath of 40 patients recruited from a drug emergency clinic in Stockholm.
Their findings have been published today, 26 April, in IOP Publishing's Journal of Breath Research.
Blood, urine and saliva ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Large study traces prehistoric human expansion into South America, where genomic studies have been lacking
Millions of previously undocumented genetic variants discovered in Brazil’s highly admixed population
Limited evidence for “escalator to extinction” in mountain ecosystems under climate change
Asians made humanity’s longest prehistoric migration and shaped the genetic landscape in the Americas, finds NTU Singapore-led study
OHSU study reveals impact of oft-overlooked cell in brain function
World’s largest bat organoid platform paves the way for pandemic preparedness
Mapping the genome of the Brazilian population, with implications for healthcare
Proof of concept for Amsterdam UMC-led HIV vaccination
MSK researchers identify key player in childhood food allergies: Thetis cells
Link between ADHD and obesity might depend on where you live
Scientists find two brain biomarkers in long COVID sufferers may be what’s causing their brain fog, other cognitive issues
Empowering cities to act: The Climate Action Navigator highlights where climate action is most needed
KAIST's pioneering VR precision technology & choreography tool receives spotlights at CHI 2025
Recently, a joint Chinese–American research team led by Dr. HU Han from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Dr. Jingmai O’Conno
Nationally recognized emergency radiologist Tarek Hanna, MD, named new chair of Diagnostic Radiology & Nuclear Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
“Chicago archaeopteryx” unveiled: New clues on dinosaur–bird transition revealed by Chinese–American research team
‘Rogue’ immune cells explain why a gluten-free diet fails in some coeliac patients
World's first patient treated with personalized CRISPR gene editing therapy at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Infant with rare, incurable disease is first to successfully receive personalized gene therapy treatment
Digital reconstruction reveals 80 steps of prehistoric life
GSA and GSA Foundation announce record support for the geosciences
UT MD Anderson and Texas Children’s Hospital announce $150 million gift from Kinder Foundation to launch Kinder Children’s Cancer Center
NIH to award $8 million for new USC Superfund center to research and address ‘forever chemicals’
TMEM219 signaling promotes intestinal cell stem cell death and exacerbates colitis
MS heroes unite in Phoenix for CMSC 2025!
Stretched in a cross pattern: Our neighboring galaxy is pulled in two axes
Scientists find the ‘meow-tation’ that gives cats their orange fur
New stem cell model sheds light on human amniotic sac development
Shorter radiation therapy after prostate surgery safe, study finds
Long-term survival in patients with low-risk cervical cancer after simple, modified, or radical hysterectomy
[Press-News.org] Culture vulturesMonkeys found to conform to social norms