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      Marmoset monkeys overcome dyadic social dilemmas while avoiding mutual defection

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      Animal Behaviour
      Elsevier BV

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          Most cited references72

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          Social Facilitation

          R Zajonc (1965)
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            The evolutionary origin of human hyper-cooperation.

            Proactive, that is, unsolicited, prosociality is a key component of our hyper-cooperation, which in turn has enabled the emergence of various uniquely human traits, including complex cognition, morality and cumulative culture and technology. However, the evolutionary foundation of the human prosocial sentiment remains poorly understood, largely because primate data from numerous, often incommensurable testing paradigms do not provide an adequate basis for formal tests of the various functional hypotheses. We therefore present the results of standardized prosociality experiments in 24 groups of 15 primate species, including humans. Extensive allomaternal care is by far the best predictor of interspecific variation in proactive prosociality. Proactive prosocial motivations therefore systematically arise whenever selection favours the evolution of cooperative breeding. Because the human data fit this general primate pattern, the adoption of cooperative breeding by our hominin ancestors also provides the most parsimonious explanation for the origin of human hyper-cooperation.
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              Other-regarding preferences in a non-human primate: common marmosets provision food altruistically.

              Human cooperation is unparalleled in the animal world and rests on an altruistic concern for the welfare of genetically unrelated strangers. The evolutionary roots of human altruism, however, remain poorly understood. Recent evidence suggests a discontinuity between humans and other primates because individual chimpanzees do not spontaneously provide food to other group members, indicating a lack of concern for their welfare. Here, we demonstrate that common marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus) do spontaneously provide food to nonreciprocating and genetically unrelated individuals, indicating that other-regarding preferences are not unique to humans and that their evolution did not require advanced cognitive abilities such as theory of mind. Because humans and marmosets are cooperative breeders and the only two primate taxa in which such unsolicited prosociality has been found, we conclude that these prosocial predispositions may emanate from cooperative breeding.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Animal Behaviour
                Animal Behaviour
                Elsevier BV
                00033472
                March 2021
                March 2021
                : 173
                : 93-104
                Article
                10.1016/j.anbehav.2020.12.020
                aceeac47-2d71-4360-b1e1-85648d54180a
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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