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  4. Stimulus Enhancement and Spread of a Spontaneous Tool Use in a Colony of Long-tailed Macaques

Stimulus Enhancement and Spread of a Spontaneous Tool Use in a Colony of Long-tailed Macaques

Author(s)
Zuberbühler, Klaus  
Laboratoire de cognition comparée  
Gygax, Lorenz
Harley, Nerida
Kummer, Hans
Date issued
1996
In
Primates, Springer
Vol
37
No
1
From page
1
To page
12
Subjects
Non-human primates Macaca fascicularis Social learning Stimulus enhancement Tool use
Abstract
In a captive group of long-tailed macaques, tool-using behavior by a single competent individual had a significant effect on the synchronous manipulative behavior of naive animals. Group members engaged in manipulations on the same object class more frequently during times when the model was working than when it was not. The form of their behavior, however, in no way resembled the technique used by the model. All three animals that later became successful tool users were among the few subjects that exhibited a significant increase in manipulations on the same object class while the model was working. Possible causal relationships between this stimulus enhancement and the transmission of the new behavior to other group members are analyzed and discussed.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/65713
DOI
10.1007/BF02382915
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Zuberbuhler_K-Stimulus_enhancement-20140416.pdf

Type

Main Article

Size

6.12 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

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