Monkeys become more calculating around money
September 22nd, 2010 - 4:17 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sept 22 (ANI): It seems even monkeys know the value of money. A new research found that when presented with coin-like tokens, tiny yet savvy capuchin monkeys inhibit their natural impulses and make more calculated, rewarding decisions.
The study provides the first demonstration that inherently worthless tokens, such as poker chips or coins, help monkeys to make more strategic decisions under certain situations.
Despite undergoing 35 million years of evolution independent of us, the monkeys’ related skills appear to be on par with those of chimpanzees and 3-year-old children. Monkeys will wheel and deal for peanuts — literally.
“Peanuts are the favourite food for all of the capuchins in our colony,” Discovery News quoted lead author Elsa Addessi as saying.
Addessi and co-author Sabrina Rossi, who are both at the National Research Council of Italy’s Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, conducted the study. Eight capuchin monkeys housed at the institute participated.
The researchers set up what is known as a reverse-reward test, where the monkeys had to select a smaller quantity of food or tokens in order to receive a larger reward. The reward consisted of chopped peanuts. Blue plastic poker chips, a small grey PVC cylinder, a brass plug, a metal nut, a black metal key and a silver metal band served as tokens.
At first the monkeys all went for the largest amounts, choosing the biggest peanut or token piles. They always did this when they saw food, but they were later able to curb this natural tendency with the tokens, which seemed to provide what the researchers said was “psychological distancing from the incentive features of food.”
Two of the monkeys in particular, a male named Sandokan and a female named Robinia, repeatedly aced the tests. For example, when presented with 1 and 2 tokens, Sandokan chose 1 and received his peanut reward. He figured out the needed strategy too. When presented with 2 and 5 tokens, he selected 2, and again got his peanuts.
“The capacity of associating a symbolic stimulus (the tokens, in this case) with a reward and the capacity of reasoning on different types of symbolic stimuli in order to choose between them is an important prerequisite for the evolution of money use in humans, which was quite a slow process developing over thousands of years,” Addessi said. “In this sense, we can say that the use of money evolved from non-human primate symbolic abilities.”
Capuchin monkeys do not use tokens in the wild, so even if they can be taught things like very basic money skills and how to play an incredibly simple game of poker, these activities are restricted to human-orchestrated testing.
Nevertheless, “both good inhibition skills and the capacity of evaluating the quality and the quantity of two options before making a choice are fundamental for wild capuchins’ survival in their environment,” Addessi added.
The study appears in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)
- Like humans, monkeys too can recall what they've seen! - Apr 29, 2011
- Monkeys can learn how to exchange money for food - Jun 11, 2008
- Old World monkeys have better numerical skills than previously thought - Mar 30, 2011
- Love hormone also fosters kindness among monkeys - Jan 06, 2012
- 'Cautious' monkeys can anticipate fights - May 30, 2010
- Male monkeys ride fathers' reputation to success - Jul 11, 2012
- Just like humans, monkeys too show self-doubt - Feb 21, 2011
- Male monkeys who wash with their own urine 'are sexually attractive' - Feb 25, 2011
- Primates better adapted to environmental changes - Dec 03, 2010
- Monkeys too display human-like empathy - Aug 26, 2008
- Seven years jail for melting, destroying coins - Mar 25, 2011
- Who's an expert nutcracker? Monkeys! - Dec 01, 2010
- No need to ban peanuts in schools, airlines: Study - Nov 15, 2010
- Monkey as butlers' help maimed US soldiers in Afghanistan lead a normal life - May 06, 2010
- Chimps can match humans in kindness - Aug 10, 2011
Tags: black metal, capuchin monkeys, capuchins, chimpanzees, chopped peanuts, discovery news, favourite food, metal key, metal nut, million years, national research council, natural impulses, natural tendency, poker chips, sabrina rossi, sandokan, silver metal, strategic decisions, tokens, value of money