TY - JOUR
T1 - Children, but not great apes, respect ownership
AU - Kanngiesser, Patricia
AU - Rossano, Federico
AU - Frickel, Ramona
AU - Tomm, Anne
AU - Tomasello, Michael
PY - 2020/1
Y1 - 2020/1
N2 - Access to and control of resources is a major source of costly conflicts. Animals, under some conditions, respect what others control and use (i.e. possession). Humans not only respect possession of resources, they also respect ownership. Ownership can be viewed as a cooperative arrangement, where individuals inhibit their tendency to take others’ property on the condition that those others will do the same. We investigated to what degree great apes follow this principle, as compared to human children. We conducted two experiments, in which dyads of individuals could access the same food resources. The main test of respect for ownership was whether individuals would refrain from taking their partner’s resources even when the partner could not immediately access and control them. Captive apes (N = 14 dyads) failed to respect their partner’s claim on food resources and frequently monopolized the resources when given the opportunity. Human children (N = 14 dyads), tested with a similar apparatus and procedure, respected their partner’s claim and made spontaneous verbal references to ownership. Such respect for the property of others highlights the uniquely cooperative nature of human ownership arrangements.
AB - Access to and control of resources is a major source of costly conflicts. Animals, under some conditions, respect what others control and use (i.e. possession). Humans not only respect possession of resources, they also respect ownership. Ownership can be viewed as a cooperative arrangement, where individuals inhibit their tendency to take others’ property on the condition that those others will do the same. We investigated to what degree great apes follow this principle, as compared to human children. We conducted two experiments, in which dyads of individuals could access the same food resources. The main test of respect for ownership was whether individuals would refrain from taking their partner’s resources even when the partner could not immediately access and control them. Captive apes (N = 14 dyads) failed to respect their partner’s claim on food resources and frequently monopolized the resources when given the opportunity. Human children (N = 14 dyads), tested with a similar apparatus and procedure, respected their partner’s claim and made spontaneous verbal references to ownership. Such respect for the property of others highlights the uniquely cooperative nature of human ownership arrangements.
UR - https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/context/psy-research/article/1627/viewcontent/KRFTT_ResOwn_Apes_preprint.pdf
U2 - 10.1111/desc.12842
DO - 10.1111/desc.12842
M3 - Article
SN - 1363-755X
VL - 23
SP - 0
EP - 0
JO - Developmental Science
JF - Developmental Science
IS - 1
ER -