This Article is From Dec 21, 2016

Humans Did Not Inherit Kindness From Chimpanzees Who Always Act In Self-Interest, Finds Study

Humans Did Not Inherit Kindness From Chimpanzees Who Always Act In Self-Interest, Finds Study

Chimpanzees won't take an interest in each other unless it has an anticipated benefit, the study said.

London: Chimpanzees, unlike human beings, are entirely selfish creatures who act in their own self-interest when it comes to altruistically helping fellow chimps, according to a new study. This latest finding turns conceived wisdom on its head. The study suggests that human beings were unlikely to have inherited the trait of kindness from their primate cousins. The animals are unlikely to take an interest in each other unless there is an anticipated benefit, researchers said.

Previous research implying helpful behaviour in chimps was likely to be a by-product of the way experiments were designed, they said.

Researchers from the universities of Manchester, Birmingham, and St Andrews in the UK and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, worked with a group of 16 Chimpanzees at the Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary, in Uganda.

Using two ingenious experiments, the team discovered the chimpanzees were no more likely to help feed each other as they were to block access to a box of peanuts.

"The evolution of social behaviour, and what drives individuals to act altruistically, is an important and active area of debate," said one of the principle investigators, Keith Jensen from University of Manchester.

"There has been an appealing suggestion that the roots of human altruism extend down at least as far as our common ancestor with chimpanzees.

"However, the results of this study challenges that view. 'Helping' might have formerly arisen in previous studies as a by-product of interesting tasks," said Jensen.

"The results of these experiments combined demonstrate that the chimpanzees did not act in a manner that would produce benefits for others in a task where there was no perceived benefit to themselves," said Claudio Tennie, from the University of Birmingham.

"Indeed, given that the participants were just as likely to prevent access to food as they were to permit access, chimpanzees are no more altruistic than they are spiteful.

"Even after they demonstrated a clear understanding of the consequences of their actions, they remained indifferent to any effects these actions may have on others. If true, this would mean that prosocial behaviour has developed late in evolution, after our split with the other apes," said Tennie.

The study was published in the journal Nature Communications.
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