Before, it was thought that only humans were capable of such guesswork. We can think about others' thoughts and emotions, such as their goals, perceptions and beliefs. According to new research, published in Science, some other primates do this too, even while watching videos starring actors dressed in shaggy King Kong suits.
This means that the ability to read others' perceptions likely evolved in our primate past -- possibly as a wily way to score more sexual partners.
Orangutan "Dokana" who participated in the study. |
"Apes have never confused the videos with real events," Kano said. "They all seem to know that the video events are fake. They were never scared with the events in the monitor."
Chimpanzee "Kara" who participated in the study. |
The children would then be asked a question like: "Where will Sally look for the item when she returns?" Very young kids tend to pick the spot where they themselves know the item is, but children starting at about age four understand that Sally does not know what they know. They anticipate that she will look in the wrong spot based on her "false belief" of where the item is.
We take such perceptiveness for granted, but it takes sophisticated brain power.
For the new study, Kano, Krupenye and their team created videotaped dramas with variations on the "Sally" plot for chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans. The actor in the King Kong outfit played a sneaky character who came in and moved an object while the "human" in the drama was either present or absent.
This skill, known as "theory of mind," refers to the fact that we can theorize about what others are thinking and what they might do next. The false belief detection skill takes this ability to a whole new level.
Scientists who conducted the more traditional "Sally" test on kids in the past thought that language was key to the ability, since the study involved verbally asking the children questions. More recent studies on children using eye-tracking, as for the apes, find that some 1.5–2-year-olds can pass the test.
This all means that the ability to understand the thoughts of others, even when those thoughts include false beliefs, evolved way back in our primate past.
Krupenye said the skills might have developed "in response to the demands of living in complex social groups." He explained since males competed with others in their group for access to females, evolution likely favored the males who could outwit their competitors. In this way, the genes for social intelligence were passed on to the next generation.
"Theory of mind," he added, "allows individuals to interpret, predict, and even manipulate others' behavior."
Read more at Discovery News
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