Chimps like humans get emotional when decisions fail to pay off

Just like humans, chimpanzees and bonobos exhibit emotional responses to outcomes of their decisions by pouting or throwing angry tantrums when a risk-taking strategy fails to pay off, a new study has found.

Washington: Just like humans, chimpanzees and bonobos exhibit emotional responses to outcomes of their decisions by pouting or throwing angry tantrums when a risk-taking strategy fails to pay off, a new study has found.

The researchers led by Alexandra Rosati from Yale University and Brian Hare from Duke University assessed the emotional responses and motivation of chimpanzees and bonobos living in African sanctuaries.

Rosati said, "Psychologists and economists have found that emotions play a critical role in shaping how humans make complex decisions, such as decisions about saving or investing money. But it was not known if these processes are shared with other animals when they make decisions about their important resources-such as food."

The apes in this study faced two different types of problems: one where they made choices about whether to wait to obtain larger rewards, and one where they made choices about whether to take a chance to obtain a high-quality treat, but risk obtaining a non-preferred food item if their gamble did not pay off.

The scientists found that both species displayed emotional responses to the outcome of their choice, but chimpanzees were more patient and likely to take risks than bonobos.

When their choice yielded the less preferred outcome, both species displayed negative emotional responses including vocalizations similar to pouts and moans, scratching, and banging-a type of tantrum thought to reflect anger in apes.

In the risky choice task, the apes even tried to switch their choice after the fact when they realized they had made a losing gamble, but never did so when their risk-taking paid off.

Some of the emotional and motivational responses displayed by the apes were species-specific while others reflected individual differences in the animals.

The study is published in the open access journal PLOS ONE.

ANI

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