Abstract Humans, including young children, are strongly motivated to help others, even paying a cost to do so. Humans’ nearest primate relatives, great apes, are likewise motivated to help others, raising the question of whether the motivations of humans and apes are the same. Here we compared the underlying motivation to help in human children and chimpanzees. Both species understood the situation and helped a conspecific in a straightforward situation. However, when helpers knew that what the other was requesting would not actually help her, only children gave her what she needed instead of giving her what she requested. These results suggest that both chimpanzees and human children help others but the underlying motivation for why they h...
Human societies are built on collaborative activities. Already from early childhood, human children ...
Directly comparing the prosocial behaviour of our two closest living relatives, bonobos and chimpanz...
Prosocial acts benefitting others are widespread amongst humans. By contrast, chimpanzees have faile...
Background: The evolution of altruism has been explained mainly from ultimate perspectives. However,...
Chimpanzees help conspecifics achieve their goals in instrumental situations but neither their immed...
Recent empirical research has shed new light on the perennial question of human altruism. A number o...
Humans regularly provide others with resources at a personal cost to themselves. Chimpanzees engage ...
Prosocial behaviours such as helping, comforting, or sharing are central to human social life. Beca...
SummaryHuman societies are built on collaborative activities. Already from early childhood, human ch...
People often act on behalf of others. They do so without immediate personal gain, at cost to themsel...
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) sometimes help both humans and conspecifics in experimental situations...
People often act on behalf of others. They do so without immediate personal gain, at cost to themsel...
The evolution of altruism has been explained mainly from ultimate perspectives. However, it remains ...
Prosocial behaviours such as helping, comforting, or sharing are central to human social life. Becau...
Humans are uniquely impressive cooperators, and yet it remains unclear exactly which cognitive and m...
Human societies are built on collaborative activities. Already from early childhood, human children ...
Directly comparing the prosocial behaviour of our two closest living relatives, bonobos and chimpanz...
Prosocial acts benefitting others are widespread amongst humans. By contrast, chimpanzees have faile...
Background: The evolution of altruism has been explained mainly from ultimate perspectives. However,...
Chimpanzees help conspecifics achieve their goals in instrumental situations but neither their immed...
Recent empirical research has shed new light on the perennial question of human altruism. A number o...
Humans regularly provide others with resources at a personal cost to themselves. Chimpanzees engage ...
Prosocial behaviours such as helping, comforting, or sharing are central to human social life. Beca...
SummaryHuman societies are built on collaborative activities. Already from early childhood, human ch...
People often act on behalf of others. They do so without immediate personal gain, at cost to themsel...
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) sometimes help both humans and conspecifics in experimental situations...
People often act on behalf of others. They do so without immediate personal gain, at cost to themsel...
The evolution of altruism has been explained mainly from ultimate perspectives. However, it remains ...
Prosocial behaviours such as helping, comforting, or sharing are central to human social life. Becau...
Humans are uniquely impressive cooperators, and yet it remains unclear exactly which cognitive and m...
Human societies are built on collaborative activities. Already from early childhood, human children ...
Directly comparing the prosocial behaviour of our two closest living relatives, bonobos and chimpanz...
Prosocial acts benefitting others are widespread amongst humans. By contrast, chimpanzees have faile...