Social coordination can provide optimal solutions to many kinds of group dilemmas, and non- human primates have been shown to perform single actions successively or simultaneously with partners to maximize food rewards in a variety of experimental settings. Less attention has been given to showing how animals are able to produce multiple (rather than single) intermixed and co-regulated actions, even though many species’ signal transmissions and social interactions rely on extended bouts of coordinated turn-taking. Here we report on coordination behaviour in three pairs of chimpanzees (mother/offspring dyads) during an experimentally induced turn-taking scenario. Participants were given a “shared” version of a computer-based serial ordering ...
Chimpanzees and bonobos are highly capable of tracking other's mental states. It has been proposed, ...
Several scholars have long suggested that human language and remarkable communicative abilities orig...
Effective social co-ordination benefits from mentally representing a partner’s actions. Chimpanzees ...
Social coordination can provide optimal solutions to many kinds of group dilemmas, and non- human pr...
Recent years have seen a growing interest in the question of whether and how groups of nonhuman prim...
One of the challenges of collaboration is to coordinate decisions with others, and recent theories h...
Humans, like many other animals, live in groups and coordinate actions with others in social setting...
One of the challenges of collaboration is to coordinate decisions with others, and recent theories h...
Much of human cooperation takes place in mutualistic contexts in which the main challenge for indivi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Humans are intensively social primates, therefore many of their actions are dedicated to communicati...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Social animals need to coordinate with others to reap the benefits of group-living even when individ...
Chimpanzees and bonobos are highly capable of tracking other's mental states. It has been proposed, ...
Several scholars have long suggested that human language and remarkable communicative abilities orig...
Effective social co-ordination benefits from mentally representing a partner’s actions. Chimpanzees ...
Social coordination can provide optimal solutions to many kinds of group dilemmas, and non- human pr...
Recent years have seen a growing interest in the question of whether and how groups of nonhuman prim...
One of the challenges of collaboration is to coordinate decisions with others, and recent theories h...
Humans, like many other animals, live in groups and coordinate actions with others in social setting...
One of the challenges of collaboration is to coordinate decisions with others, and recent theories h...
Much of human cooperation takes place in mutualistic contexts in which the main challenge for indivi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Humans are intensively social primates, therefore many of their actions are dedicated to communicati...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Successful collaboration often relies on individuals' capacity to communicate with each other. Despi...
Social animals need to coordinate with others to reap the benefits of group-living even when individ...
Chimpanzees and bonobos are highly capable of tracking other's mental states. It has been proposed, ...
Several scholars have long suggested that human language and remarkable communicative abilities orig...
Effective social co-ordination benefits from mentally representing a partner’s actions. Chimpanzees ...