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Chimpanzees pass on customs and culture just as humans do

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Chimpanzees pass on customs and culture just as humans do

Postby AspirinE » Jun 12th, '07, 14:56

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Chimpanzees readily learn and share techniques on how to fiddle with gadgets, new research shows, the best evidence yet that our closest living relatives pass on customs and culture just as humans do.

The new findings help shed light on the capabilities of last common ancestor of humans and chimps. And the research could also help develop better robots and artificial intelligences, the researchers say.

In the wild, chimpanzee troops are often distinct from one another, possessing collections of up to 20 traditions or customary behaviors that altogether seem to form unique cultures. Such practices include various forms of tool use, including hammers and pestles; courtship rituals such as leaf-clipping, where leaves are clipped noisily with the teeth; social behaviors such as overhead hand-clasping during mutual grooming; and methods for eradicating parasites by either stabbing or squashing them.

While observing chimpanzees, evolutionary psychologist Antoine Spiteri at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland wanted to help settle the question of whether or not the apes learned such practices by watching others like humans do, as opposed to simply knowing how to perform such behaviors innately.

Spiteri and his colleagues investigated six groups of chimpanzees, each with eight to 11 apes, living in captivity in Bastrop, Texas. The researchers taught a lone chimpanzee from one group one technique for obtaining food from a complex gadget, such as stabbing food with a tool. They next taught one chimp from another group a different technique for extracting food from the same gadget, such as pushing it out down a ramp.

The extremely hot Texas weather made it hard for researchers to work, "and because participation by the chimpanzees in each of these studies has been completely voluntary, it sometimes means that we as experimenters have had to be extremely patient," Spiteri recalled. "Considering the insights we have gathered, it has been worth the sacrifice."

Over time, the researchers found each technique for tool use and food extraction spread within each group. In essence, these groups displayed their own unique culture and local traditions.

A number of these chimpanzee groups are next-door neighbors within eyeshot of each other, and researchers found traditions proved catching, with foraging practices spreading from one group to another, findings detailed in the June 19 issue of the journal Current Biology.

"The possibility that some primates may be able to learn from others has great implications on how we treat them and how we think about ourselves," Spiteri told LiveScience. "These results indicate to us that chimps have a capacity for cultural complexity, which was likely shared by our common ancestor going back around 5 million years ago."

This work is "particularly useful to robotic development and artificial intelligence," Spiteri added. "Understanding how the mechanisms of imitation and social learning can help us develop artificial beings that can behave and evolve in the way that we do and ultimately it may help us create other brains."

Source: http://www.livescience.com


Creation scientists are going to have to think hard to come up with fireback answer lol. :smoking:
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AspirinE
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Re: Chimpanzees pass on customs and culture just as humans do

Postby AspirinE » Jun 12th, '07, 19:01

danigantt wrote:that doesn't prove anything actually. :unsure:
chimpanzees can pass on how to use tools... big whoop.

this guy could follow a herd of elephants and find the same exact things, but no one is trying to prove how humans evolved from elephants.

Say what? That elephants evolving to be humans line u posted means as much to me as my RS teacher asking his cunning "rhetoric" questions about why lions don't evolve to have 5 heads instead of one.

Culture and and customs are the main basis of humanity, creationists argue that monkeys or other animals can not evolve since they are not made to, and the the everlasting question: "ohh woopdy doo, why do monkeys not evolve to be humans like we did?" This observation clearly shows how one species that are not evolved enough to discover tools can in fact learn and adopt, simple, diligent experiment.

It is a big woop.. and i seriously hope you didn't jump on my post because ur a "creation scientist", i thought you were smarter than that.

:roll:
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