2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.07.010
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Decision making across social contexts: competition increases preferences for risk in chimpanzees and bonobos

Abstract: Context can have a powerful influence on decision-making strategies in humans. In particular, people sometimes shift their economic preferences depending on the broader social context, such as the presence of potential competitors or mating partners. Despite the important role of competition in primate conspecific interactions, as well as evidence that competitive social contexts impact primates' social cognitive skills, there has been little study of how social context influences the strategies that nonhumans… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(89 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
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“…Together with comparative studies of the endowment effect [13,14], risk sensitivity [15] and ambiguity aversion [16,17], our work suggests that core features of human decision-making may reflect biological predispositions and that experience with monetary markets may not be necessary for components of human economic behaviour to emerge. Although chimpanzees and bonobos exhibited differences in risk preferences in previous studies [18][19][20][21], we found no differences in their responses to framing. This aligns with previous work indicating that chimpanzees and bonobos may differ specifically in cognitive capacities relevant to their natural socioecology but show broad commonalities in cognition across many other contexts [22].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 55%
“…Together with comparative studies of the endowment effect [13,14], risk sensitivity [15] and ambiguity aversion [16,17], our work suggests that core features of human decision-making may reflect biological predispositions and that experience with monetary markets may not be necessary for components of human economic behaviour to emerge. Although chimpanzees and bonobos exhibited differences in risk preferences in previous studies [18][19][20][21], we found no differences in their responses to framing. This aligns with previous work indicating that chimpanzees and bonobos may differ specifically in cognitive capacities relevant to their natural socioecology but show broad commonalities in cognition across many other contexts [22].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 55%
“…Most of the work on risk preferences in primates has used a payoff structure where the “risky” and constant options had equivalent overall rewards and only varied in the way those rewards were distributed, as in our EPGT condition (Rosati and Hare 2012; Heilbronner et al 2008). Typically, the “risky” option involves a 50 % probability of getting the highest value reward and a 50 % chance of getting the lowest value reward; the average payoff was the same between this and the “safe” option.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chimpanzees present a more complex picture. In the “risky” payoff structure described above, chimpanzees have been classified as risk-prone, preferentially selecting the more variable option with this payout structure (Heilbronner et al 2008; Rosati and Hare 2012). In contrast, in our EPGT condition, where both options also had the same average payoff, chimpanzees were either variance avoidant or indifferent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increasing evidence suggests that adult chimpanzees and bonobos actually differ in a set of cognitive traits related to foraging, including levels of feeding tolerance (Hare, Melis, Woods, Hastings, and Wrangham, 2007;Wobber, Wrangham, and Hare, 2010b), tool use abilities , spatial memory (Rosati and Hare, 2012b), and patterns of value-based decision-making (Heilbronner, Rosati, Hare, and Hauser, 2008;Rosati and Hare, 2011, 2012a …”
Section: Comparative Developmental Psychologymentioning
confidence: 99%