Cumulative tool-based culture underwrote our species' evolutionary success, and tool-based nut-cracking is one of the strongest candidates for cultural transmission in our closest relatives, chimpanzees. However the social learning processes that may explain both the similarities and differences between the species remain unclear. A previous study of nut-cracking by initially naive chimpanzees suggested that a learning chimpanzee holding no hammer nevertheless replicated hammering actions it witnessed. This observation has potentially important implications for the nature of the social learning processes and underlying motor coding involved. In the present study, model and observer actions were quantified frame-by-frame and analysed with st...
Cultural transmission, by definition, involves some form of social learning. Chimpanzees and other n...
BACKGROUND: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...
Background: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...
A.R. was supported by ERC Advanced Grant 230604 SOMACCA to W. Tecumseh Fitch. SMP was supported by f...
Imitative learning has received great attention due to its supposed role in the development of cultu...
There is currently much debate about the nature of social learning in chimpanzees., The main questio...
Emulation has been distinguished from imitation as a form of observational learning because it focus...
There is currently much debate about the nature of social learning in chimpanzees., The main questio...
Although tool use occurs in diverse species, its complexity may mark an important distinction betwee...
We describe our recent studies of imitation and cultural transmission in chimpanzees and children, w...
We describe our recent studies of imitation and cultural transmission in chimpanzees and children, w...
Imitation is a cornerstone in human development, serving both a cognitive function (e.g. in the acqu...
Many studies investigating culture in non-human animals tend to focus on the inferred need of social...
Cultural transmission, by definition, involves some form of social learning. Chimpanzees and other n...
The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the past two decad...
Cultural transmission, by definition, involves some form of social learning. Chimpanzees and other n...
BACKGROUND: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...
Background: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...
A.R. was supported by ERC Advanced Grant 230604 SOMACCA to W. Tecumseh Fitch. SMP was supported by f...
Imitative learning has received great attention due to its supposed role in the development of cultu...
There is currently much debate about the nature of social learning in chimpanzees., The main questio...
Emulation has been distinguished from imitation as a form of observational learning because it focus...
There is currently much debate about the nature of social learning in chimpanzees., The main questio...
Although tool use occurs in diverse species, its complexity may mark an important distinction betwee...
We describe our recent studies of imitation and cultural transmission in chimpanzees and children, w...
We describe our recent studies of imitation and cultural transmission in chimpanzees and children, w...
Imitation is a cornerstone in human development, serving both a cognitive function (e.g. in the acqu...
Many studies investigating culture in non-human animals tend to focus on the inferred need of social...
Cultural transmission, by definition, involves some form of social learning. Chimpanzees and other n...
The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the past two decad...
Cultural transmission, by definition, involves some form of social learning. Chimpanzees and other n...
BACKGROUND: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...
Background: The evidence for culture in non-human animals has been growing incrementally over the pa...