Updated
Updated · BIOENGINEER.ORG · Jun 18
Study Finds 48 Great Apes Show Stable Cognitive Profiles, Diverging From Human Social Cognition
Updated
Updated · BIOENGINEER.ORG · Jun 18

Study Finds 48 Great Apes Show Stable Cognitive Profiles, Diverging From Human Social Cognition

3 articles · Updated · BIOENGINEER.ORG · Jun 18

Summary

  • Forty-eight bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans tracked for 18 months showed stable individual cognitive differences rather than a single species-wide pattern, according to a Psychological Science study.
  • Six tests found performance was shaped by social group, prior research exposure, sex and rearing history, reinforcing the view that ape cognition develops through individual life experience.
  • Social-cue tasks such as following a human’s attention did not strongly correlate with one another, while nonsocial reasoning tasks did, pointing to a cognitive structure unlike humans’.
  • The findings challenge human-centered comparative tests and bolster calls for species-specific, longitudinal methods to study ape minds, with potential implications for welfare and conservation programs.

Insights

Since no single ape is 'smartest,' what does intelligence truly mean for animals, humans, and even AI?
If individual apes have unique minds, must we rethink the ethical basis of their captivity and conservation?
Ape minds separate social and logical skills. What evolutionary pressure forced these two systems to merge in humans?