4.2 Article

Robust Retention and Transfer of Tool Construction Techniques in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 130, Issue 1, Pages 24-35

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0040000

Keywords

memory; tool use; chimpanzee; compound tool

Funding

  1. Durham University SSHI scholarship
  2. Royal Society
  3. John Templeton Foundation [40128]

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Long-term memory can be critical to a species' survival in environments with seasonal and even longer-term cycles of resource availability. The present, longitudinal study investigated whether complex tool behaviors used to gain an out-of-reach reward, following a hiatus of about 3 years and 7 months since initial experiences with a tool use task, were retained and subsequently executed more quickly by experienced than by naive chimpanzees. Ten of the 11 retested chimpanzees displayed impressive long-term procedural memory, creating elongated tools using the same methods employed years previously, either combining 2 tools or extending a single tool. The complex tool behaviors were also transferred to a different task context, showing behavioral flexibility. This represents some of the first evidence for appreciable long-term procedural memory, and improvements in the utility of complex tool manufacture in chimpanzees. Such long-term procedural memory and behavioral flexibility have important implications for the longevity and transmission of behavioral traditions.

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