Bonobos and chimpanzees preferentially attend to familiar members of the dominant sex

Laura S. Lewis, Fumihiro Kano, Jeroen M.G. Stevens, Jamie G. DuBois, Josep Call, Christopher Krupenye

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Social animals must carefully track consequential events and opportunities for social learning. However, the competing demands of the social world produce trade-offs in social attention, defined as directed visual attention towards conspecifics. A key question is how socioecology shapes these biases in social attention over evolution and development. Chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes, and bonobos, Pan paniscus, provide ideal models for addressing this question because they have large communities with fission–fusion grouping, divergent sex-based dominance hierarchies and occasional intergroup encounters. Using noninvasive eye-tracking measures, we recorded captive apes’ attention to side-by-side images of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics of the same sex. We tested four competing hypotheses about the influence of taxonomically widespread socioecological pressures on social attention, including intergroup conflict, dominance, dispersal and mating competition. Both species preferentially attended to familiar over unfamiliar conspecifics when viewing the sex that typically occupies the highest ranks in the group: females for bonobos, and males for chimpanzees. However, they did not demonstrate attentional biases between familiar and unfamiliar members of the subordinate sex. Findings were consistent across species despite differences in which sex tends to be more dominant. These results suggest that sex-based dominance patterns guide social attention across Pan. Our findings reveal how socioecological pressures shape social attention in apes and likely contribute to the evolution of social cognition across primates.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)193-206
Number of pages14
JournalAnimal Behaviour
Volume177
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2021

Keywords

  • dominance
  • eye tracking
  • familiarity
  • great apes
  • preferential looking
  • social attention

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Animal Science and Zoology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Bonobos and chimpanzees preferentially attend to familiar members of the dominant sex'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this