Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Toddlers copy peers to fit in, apes don't

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Oct, 2014 08:05 AM
    The tendency to adjust behaviour and preferences just to fit in a group or community appears in children at an age as early as two years -- but not so in our close relatives like chimpanzees and orangutans, a new research shows.
     
    "Our research shows that children as young as two years of age conform to others, while chimpanzees and orangutans instead prefer to stick with what they know," said lead researcher Daniel Haun from Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.
     
    The researchers earlier found that both children and chimpanzees rely on the majority opinion when they are trying to learn something new.
     
    But human adults sometimes follow the majority even when they already have the relevant knowledge, just so that they do not stand out from the group.
     
    To find out whether young children and apes would also show this so-called "normative" conformity, the researchers presented 18 two-year-old children, 12 chimpanzees, and 12 orangutans with a similar reward-based task.
     
    The results revealed that children were more likely to adjust their behaviour to match that of their peers than were the apes.
     
    While the human children conformed more than half of the time, the apes and orangutans almost always ignored their peers, opting instead to stick with the original strategy they had learned.
     
    A second study with a group of 72 two-year-olds showed that children tended to switch their choice more when they made the choice in front of their peers than when they made the choice privately.
     
    The study was published in the journal Psychological Science.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies

    Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies
    When feeling down and out, do you scan through Facebook profiles of friends who are not so successful to find some solace that you are not alone struggling with life?

    Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies

    113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook

    113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook
    Anna Stoehr, one of the oldest living people in the world at age 113, has finally got herself a Facebook account. What she had to do was to lie about her actual age as the earliest birth year listed on Facebook to create a new profile is 1905.

    113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook

    Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case

    Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case
    VANCOUVER - A sentencing hearing for two gang members convicted in a mass killing in the Vancouver area may happen in early December, but only if the court refuses to hear a defence application to have the case tossed out.

    Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case

    Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought

    Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought
    A new measurement of dark matter in the Milky Way has revealed there is half as much of the mysterious substance as previously thought.

    Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought

    How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour

    How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour
    Researchers have uncovered a new class of oxytocin-responsive brain cells that regulates an important aspect of female sexual interest in male mice, suggesting that the same mechanism is followed in humans for selecting mate.

    How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour

    Sharing workspace with opposite sex boosts productivity

    Sharing workspace with opposite sex boosts productivity
    Although men and women love to work in single sex offices, productivity goes up if they share space with the opposite gender, finds an interesting research.

    Sharing workspace with opposite sex boosts productivity