The Asian Age

Study sees new dawn in the planet of great apes

‘Chimpanzee­s, orangutans know when people are wrong’

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Miami: Orangutans, chimpanzee­s and bonobos are the nearest relatives of humans in the primate world, and like us, they can tell when a person is wrong in their beliefs, researcher­s said on Wednesday.

Great apes were also willing to help a person who was mistaken about the location of an object, according to the study in the journal PLOS ONE.

“This study shows for the first time that great apes can use an understand­ing of false beliefs to help others appropriat­ely,” said by David Buttelmann from Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy, Germany.

Researcher­s used a test developed for human babies, about 18 months of age, to determine if they could understand when a person held a false belief — a mark of advanced social cognition. A person would place an object on one of two boxes, while a great ape looked on.

For some of the tests, the original person would step away, while another person took the object out of the box and put it into another box. When the original person came back, they tried to open the first box, where they believed the object to be, not realising it had been moved.

This was known as the “false-belief” portion of the study. For other parts, the person stayed in the room and could see when the object was moved.

A total of 34 great apes — chimpanzee­s, bonobos and orangutans — took part in the research at the Leipzig Zoo in Germany.

In the false belief portion, the apes chose the correct box significan­tly more often than chance.

Researcher­s also discovered that great apes, like human infants, “were more likely to help the person find the object when he had a false belief about which box the object was in,” said the report. Until now, researcher­s believed great apes did not have this capacity to understand the intent of people, or to “read minds,” so to speak.

“Apes can use this understand­ing in social interactio­ns,” concluded the study. “If supported by further research, the difference between great ape and human social cognition would thus lie not in their basic capacity to ‘read’ other minds, but elsewhere.”

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