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Reciprocity and parrots:
Griffin the grey parrot appears to understand benefits of sharing, study
suggests
Reciprocity and parrots:
Griffin the grey parrot appears to understand benefits of sharing, study
suggests
Date:
February 25,
2014
Source:
University of Lincoln
Summary:
A study into whether grey parrots understand the
notion of sharing suggests that they can learn the benefits of reciprocity. The
research involved a grey parrot called Griffin, who consistently favoured the
option of 'sharing' with two different human partners.
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A study into
whether grey parrots understand the notion of sharing suggests that they can
learn the benefits of reciprocity. The research involved a grey parrot called
Griffin, who consistently favoured the option of 'sharing' with two different
human partners.
Griffin was
presented with a choice of four different coloured cups. A green cup (the
sharing option) meant he and his partner each got treats. A pink cup
represented the selfish choice as only Griffin got a treat, an orange cup was
the giving option as only his partner got a treat, and a violet cup denoted the
spiteful selection as no one got treats.
With few
exceptions he consistently favoured green for each human partner, indicating he
understood the benefits of choosing the 'sharing' option.
The results
of this study, carried out by Dr Franck Péron, from the School of Life
Sciences, University of Lincoln, UK, with colleagues at Harvard University and
Brandeis University, US, have now been published in the journal Animal
Cognition.
The question
under investigation was whether Griffin would learn the human partner's actions,
understand that the human was replicating his own behaviour by acting in a
reciprocal manner, and that by choosing the green (sharing) cup, he could
maximize the overall payoff, because then each would receive a reward on each
turn.
It followed
a previous study conducted by the same team, which focused on grey parrots and
used a similar token-based system, demonstrating a limited understanding of
reciprocity in grey parrots.
When the
pairs involved several different human-parrot pairings with each human playing
a specific role, such as being selfish, giving, or copying the bird's
behaviour, birds' responses only tended towards consistency with human
behaviour.
It was
theorised that the birds' inability to understand the copycat condition fully
-- that they could potentially maximize reward by choosing to share -- was a
consequence of their viewing the copycat's behaviour as erratic, compared with
the consistently selfish or giving humans and therefore not realising that they
were being mirrored.
Dr Péron
said: "This follow-up experiment has shown that at least one grey parrot
-- the dominant in this case -- responded in a manner suggesting that he
deduced the appropriate eventualities.
"With few exceptions, Griffin chose the green sharing
cup. He seemed to understand the parameters of the study; that is, that each
person was mirroring Griffin's own behaviour and not acting erratically.
Although choosing pink (selfish) would have presented the same immediate reward
as choosing green (sharing), Griffin did not act in that manner. He seemed to
figure out fairly quickly that his choice of pink meant that he would miss a
reward when the human subsequently made the choice."
A possible
explanation for Griffin's behaviour may be derived from two papers on primates,
which argue that various forms of reciprocal behaviour in non-human primates
can be explained as either a balancing act between fairness and empathy, or
fairness and welfare.
The basic
idea in both papers is that the choice of group members to reciprocate in kind
derives from the interplay among selfishness, some level of concern for the
well-being of others, and some sense of fairness.
The new data
suggests that some level of reciprocity can be demonstrated in at least one
avian species, whatever the underlying mechanisms. The basis for such behaviour
may be a consequence of the same evolutionary pressures that were exerted to
develop advanced cognitive and communicative abilities in both avian and
primate lineages.
The team
suggested that copycat trials should be performed as a separate experiment,
without being contrasted with trials in which humans acted consistently, in
order to determine if results might have differed.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Lincoln. Note: Materials may be
edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Franck Péron, Luke Thornberg, Brya Gross, Suzanne Gray, Irene M. Pepperberg. Human–Grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus) reciprocity: a follow-up study. Animal Cognition, 2014; DOI: 10.1007/s10071-014-0726-3