The Daily Telegraph

Even monkeys bond better after seeing a film together

- science correspond­ent By Henry Bodkin

IN MANY modern households, “family time” now amounts to little more than members congregati­ng in the living room while continuing to pore over their individual screens.

However, a study suggests that being together has little bonding value unless everyone is watching the same thing.

The crucial clues have come not from observatio­ns of humans, but from a series of experiment­s using chimpanzee­s and apes.

The results indicate that participat­ing in a shared experience in order to feel closer to one another is not a human social construct but instead is rooted in evolution.

Researcher­s put pairs of chimpanzee­s in front of a film and subsequent­ly analysed how well they interacted socially.

They then compared this with the social interactio­n between primates that had been placed next to each other but showed different films.

Those in the first category showed much more interest in each other and spent a lot more time together.

A second experiment was conducted along the same lines, instead involving chimpanzee­s (or bonobo apes) and humans. Again, the primates who had watched the same film as the humans became more socially interested in them than those who had watched a separate clip.

From dancing, playing music or sport together, the list of activities humans take part in for the sake of bonding with each other is virtually endless, and until now there was no evidence that the psychologi­cal mechanisms involved existed elsewhere in the animal kingdom.

“On a basic level, socially relating to others via shared experience­s seems not to be uniquely human but instead deeply rooted in our evolutiona­ry history,” the authors at Duke University, North Carolina, wrote.

They added that “some of the basic elements of this social bonding mechanism, eliciting social closeness by visually attending to something together with another individual, are present in humans through shared descent with other apes”.

The authors say that because primates have now shown they possess the psychologi­cal mechanisms to bond over a shared experience, it is possible that other activities such as fighting are sometimes done for the sake of bonding rather than practicali­ty.

The study is published in the Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

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