Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provide. Pay-to-stay and social prestige models of helping attribute this variation to audience effects, i.e. that individuals help more if group members can witness their interactions with immatures, whereas models of kin selection, group augmentation, or ones stressing the need to gain parenting experience do not predict any audience effects. We quantified the readiness of adult marmosets to share food in the presence or absence of other group members. Contrary to both predictions we found a reverse audience effect on food sharing behaviour: marmosets would systematically share more food with immatures when no audience was present. Thus, helping ...
Directly comparing the behaviour of our two closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, durin...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets raise their infants with the help of other adult group membe...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Both human and nonhuman primates show the capacity to demonstrate other-regarding preferences, i.e.,...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Prosocial motivation has been suggested to facilitate the initiation and maintenance of cooperative ...
Recently, much attention has been paid to the role of cooperative breeding in the evolution of behav...
Background: Recently, much attention has been paid to the role of cooperative breeding in the evolut...
In many animals, individuals will often help each other. By benefiting others at their own expense, ...
Directly comparing the behaviour of our two closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, durin...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets raise their infants with the help of other adult group membe...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets show substantial variation in the amount of help they provid...
Both human and nonhuman primates show the capacity to demonstrate other-regarding preferences, i.e.,...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Many non-human primates have been observed to reciprocate and to understand reciprocity in one-to-on...
Prosocial motivation has been suggested to facilitate the initiation and maintenance of cooperative ...
Recently, much attention has been paid to the role of cooperative breeding in the evolution of behav...
Background: Recently, much attention has been paid to the role of cooperative breeding in the evolut...
In many animals, individuals will often help each other. By benefiting others at their own expense, ...
Directly comparing the behaviour of our two closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, durin...
Cooperatively breeding common marmosets raise their infants with the help of other adult group membe...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...