QQ登录

只需要一步,快速开始

 注册地址  找回密码
查看: 3112|回复: 3
打印 上一主题 下一主题

Young Female Chimpanzees Treat Sticks as Dolls

[复制链接]
字体大小: 正常 放大
张立涛 实名认证       

280

主题

5

听众

2452

积分

  • TA的每日心情
    奋斗
    2015-10-7 09:09
  • 签到天数: 75 天

    [LV.6]常住居民II

    优秀斑竹奖

    群组西北工业大学

    群组Matlab讨论组

    群组狂热数模爱好者

    群组岩土力学与地下工程

    跳转到指定楼层
    1#
    发表于 2010-12-23 13:44 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览
    |招呼Ta 关注Ta
    Young Female Chimpanzees Treat Sticks as Dolls: Growing Evidence of Biological Basis for Gender-Specific Play in Humans
    Researchers have reported some of the first evidence that chimpanzee youngsters in the wild may tend to play differently depending on their **, just as human children around the world do.
    101220121109-large.jpg
    Chimpanzee holding baby. Researchers have reported some of the first evidence that chimpanzee youngsters in the wild may tend to play differently depending on their **, just as human children around the world do.

    Scientists at Harvard University and Bates College say female chimpanzees appear to treat sticks as dolls, carrying them around until they have offspring of their own. Young males engage in such behavior much less frequently.
    The new work by Sonya M. Kahlenberg and Richard W. Wrangham, described this week in the journal Current Biology, provides the first suggestive evidence of a wild non-human species playing with rudimentary dolls, as well as the first known ** difference in a wild animal's choice of playthings.
    The two researchers say their work adds to a growing body of evidence that human children are probably born with their own ideas of how they want to behave, rather than simply mirroring other girls who play with dolls and boys who play with trucks. Doll play among humans could have its origins in object-carrying by earlier apes, they say, suggesting that toy selection is probably not due entirely to socialization.
    "In humans, there are robust ** differences in children's toy play, and these are remarkably similar across cultures," says Kahlenberg, a lecturer in biology at Bates who conducted the research as a postdoctoral researcher in Wrangham's group at Harvard. "While socialization by elders and peers has been the primary explanation, our work suggests that biology may also have an important role to play in activity preferences."
    In 14 years of data on chimpanzee behavior at the Kibale National Park in Uganda, Kahlenberg and Wrangham counted more than 100 examples of stick-carrying. In many cases young females weren't using the sticks for foraging or fighting, as adults sometimes do, or for any other discernable purpose.
    Some young chimpanzees carried sticks into the nest to sleep with them and on one occasion built a separate nest for the stick. The researchers even witnessed the animals playing a version of the "airplane game," lying on their backs with their "offspring" balanced across their upraised hands.
    "We have seen juveniles occasionally carrying sticks for many years, and because they sometimes treated them rather like dolls, we wanted to know if in general this behavior tended to represent something like playing with dolls," says Wrangham, the Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard. "If the doll hypothesis was right we thought that females should carry sticks more than males do, and that the chimpanzees should stop carrying sticks when they had their first offspring. We have now watched enough young chimpanzees to test both points."
    Kahlenberg and Wrangham's observations included a few adult females carrying sticks, but only before they became mothers for the first time. Their finding clearly links juvenile play to adult behavior, since female chimpanzees, not males, carry infants more than 99 percent of the time.
    "Obviously in humans there is a huge role for peers, parents, and others to influence a child's preferences for different kinds of toys, and the same may well be true of chimpanzees," Wrangham says. "One of the things that makes our finding fascinating is that there is little evidence of anything comparable in other chimpanzee communities, which raises the possibility that the chimpanzees are copying a local behavioral tradition. So this may be a lovely case of biological and social influences being intertwined."
    Kahlenberg and Wrangham's research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Leakey Foundation, the National Geographic Society, the Getty Foundation, and the Wenner-Gren Foundation.
    zan
    转播转播0 分享淘帖0 分享分享0 收藏收藏0 支持支持0 反对反对0 微信微信
    优秀的男人最有魅力!
    柯雷 实名认证       

    0

    主题

    3

    听众

    325

    积分

    升级  8.33%

  • TA的每日心情
    开心
    2011-9-10 23:19
  • 签到天数: 2 天

    [LV.1]初来乍到

    群组数学建摸协会

    群组东北三省联盟

    群组Matlab讨论组

    群组中科院考研(计算机)

    群组华中科技大学

    回复

    使用道具 举报

    39133120 实名认证       

    10

    主题

    4

    听众

    1045

    积分

  • TA的每日心情
    开心
    2014-9-6 09:56
  • 签到天数: 209 天

    [LV.7]常住居民III

    自我介绍
    希望和大家交流学习!

    群组小草的客厅

    群组数学专业考研加油站

    群组数学建摸协会

    群组数学建模培训课堂2

    回复

    使用道具 举报

    17

    主题

    3

    听众

    2216

    积分

  • TA的每日心情
    开心
    2012-1-30 23:29
  • 签到天数: 39 天

    [LV.5]常住居民I

    群组小草的客厅

    群组数学建模

    群组Matlab讨论组

    群组LINGO

    群组中南民族大学

    回复

    使用道具 举报

    您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册地址

    qq
    收缩
    • 电话咨询

    • 04714969085
    fastpost

    关于我们| 联系我们| 诚征英才| 对外合作| 产品服务| QQ

    手机版|Archiver| |繁體中文 手机客户端  

    蒙公网安备 15010502000194号

    Powered by Discuz! X2.5   © 2001-2013 数学建模网-数学中国 ( 蒙ICP备14002410号-3 蒙BBS备-0002号 )     论坛法律顾问:王兆丰

    GMT+8, 2025-8-14 06:45 , Processed in 0.601292 second(s), 72 queries .

    回顶部