Long-tailed macaques ( Macaca fascicularis ) can use simple heuristics but fail at drawing statistical inferences from populations to samples
Author(s) -
Sarah Placì,
Johanna Eckert,
Hannes Rakoczy,
Julia Fischer
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.181025
Subject(s) - heuristics , primate , macaque , population , statistical inference , old world , psychology , cognitive psychology , biology , artificial intelligence , statistics , evolutionary biology , computer science , zoology , mathematics , demography , ecology , sociology , operating system
Human infants, apes and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions from populations of objects to samples based on proportional information. This suggests that statistical reasoning might depend on some core knowledge that humans share with other primate species. To aid the reconstruction of the evolution of this capacity, we investigated whether intuitive statistical reasoning is also present in a species of Old World monkey. In a series of four experiments, 11 long-tailed macaques were offered different pairs of populations containing varying proportions of preferred versus neutral food items. One population always contained a higher proportion of preferred items than the other. An experimenter simultaneously drew one item out of each population, hid them in her fists and presented them to the monkeys to choose. Although some individuals performed well across most experiments, our results imply that long-tailed macaques as a group did not make statistical inferences from populations of food items to samples but rather relied on heuristics. These findings suggest that there may have been convergent evolution of this ability in New World monkeys and apes (including humans).
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