2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10071-015-0916-7
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Trading up: chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) show self-control through their exchange behavior

Abstract: Self-control is defined as the ability or capacity to obtain an objectively more valuable outcome rather than an objectively less valuable outcome though tolerating a longer delay or a greater effort requirement (or both) in obtaining that more valuable outcome. A number of tests have been devised to assess self-control in nonhuman animals, including exchange tasks. In this study, three chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) participated in a delay of gratification task that required food exchange as the behavioral res… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…The chimpanzees voluntarily separated from one another for the current test sessions, but remained in constant visual and auditory access to one another during testing. These chimpanzees had participated in a wide range of cognitive-behavioral testing, including tests of self-control that require delay of gratification (e.g., Beran, 2002; Beran & Evans, 2006; Beran et al, 2016; Beran, Savage-Rumbaugh, Pate, & Rumbaugh, 1999; Evans & Beran, 2007; Parrish et al, 2013). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The chimpanzees voluntarily separated from one another for the current test sessions, but remained in constant visual and auditory access to one another during testing. These chimpanzees had participated in a wide range of cognitive-behavioral testing, including tests of self-control that require delay of gratification (e.g., Beran, 2002; Beran & Evans, 2006; Beran et al, 2016; Beran, Savage-Rumbaugh, Pate, & Rumbaugh, 1999; Evans & Beran, 2007; Parrish et al, 2013). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chimpanzees have excelled in the accumulation task across extended delay periods (up to 11 minutes), when food items were not visible to the animals, in the absence of an experimenter (Beran & Evans, 2006), and even in the face of sustained effort (Beran & Evans, 2009) or when coordination with a social partner was required to facilitate reward delivery (Parrish, Perdue, Evans, & Beran, 2013). Chimpanzees also demonstrate impressive levels of self-control in other paradigms, including food-exchange tasks that require subjects to trade a food item in their possession for a potentially higher-valued reward (e.g., Beran, Rossettie, & Parrish, 2016; Dufour, PelĂ©, Sterk, & Thierry, 2007). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In that case, choice of the larger-later option means animals are then committed to waiting out the delay interval (e.g., Ainslie, 1974; Berns, Laibson, and Lowenstein, 2007; Logue, 1988; Tobin, Chelonis, and Logue, 1993; Tobin, Logue, Chelonis, Ackerman, and May, 1996; Rachlin and Green, 1972; Stevens, Hallinan, and Hauser, 2005; Stevens and MĂŒhlhoff, 2012). Other tasks require animals to avoid immediate rewards for the sake of obtaining later, better ones, either through movements through space where the less preferred item is encountered first (e.g., Evans and Westergaard, 2006; Stevens, Rosati, Ross, and Hauser, 2005) or by keeping a lower preference item (rather than consuming it) through a delay in order to exchange it for a more preferred item at a later time (e.g., Beran, Rossettie, and Parrish, 2016; Dufour, PelĂ©, Sterck, and Thierry, 2007; Judge and Essler, 2013; PelĂ©, Dufour, Micheletta, and Thierry, 2010; PelĂ©, Micheletta, Uhlrich, Thierry, and Dufour, 2011; Ramseyer, PelĂ©, Dufour, Chauvin, and Thierry, 2006). In these tasks, subjects must avoid taking the less preferred but more immediate reward, which is always present and (presumably) always a temptation, so as to later obtain the better reward (e.g., Beran, Savage-Rumbaugh, Pate, and Rumbaugh, 1999; Grosch and Neuringer, 1981).…”
Section: 1 Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This trading behavior is well-established with chimpanzees in a variety of other self-control tests in which delayed rewards are obtained that are better than immediate ones (e.g., Beran, Rossettie, & Parrish, in press; Dufour, Pele, Sterck, & Thierry, 2007). Furthermore, chimpanzees and other great apes will allow food quantities to continue to grow when delaying eating those items continues the accumulation (Beran 2002; Beran & Evans, 2006; Evans & Beran, 2007; Parrish et al, 2014; Stevens et al, 2011), a form of self-control that one might also infer is relevant to understanding cooking, where the longer one waits (to a point), the better the food becomes.…”
Section: Is Knowledge Of Cooking Really Required To Explain the Chimpmentioning
confidence: 75%