Royal Society Open Science (Sep 2024)
Chimpanzees utilize video as reference in a spatiotemporally distant search for hidden food
Abstract
Referring to things that are displaced in space and time is one of the defining features of human language. In order to better understand the evolution of human language, it is therefore important to explore how widely the ability for displaced reference is shared in animal kingdom. In this study, we explored whether chimpanzees are capable of utilizing video as a displaced reference in a spatiotemporally distant task. We used video to inform chimpanzees about an otherwise unobservable food-hiding. We examined the extent to which chimpanzees would make use of video as a source of information to guide their retrieval of hidden food from a target container. We found that when the event of observing food-hiding and the event of retrieving hidden food were close in space and time within the same room, all chimpanzees solved the task. Some chimpanzees continued to solve the task even when the two events were distant and separated spatiotemporally, in which they had to move to the next room between the events. Our findings suggested that chimpanzees can utilize video as a displaced reference to retrieve hidden food later when solving real-life problems.
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