Freitag, 20. Mai 2022

The Social Role of Inhibition in Primates and Other Animals

Dunbar & Shultz (2022)

Abstract

The capacity to inhibit prepotent actions (inhibitory self-control) plays an important role in many aspects of the behaviour of birds and mammals. Although a number of studies have used it as an index of foraging skills, inhibition is, in fact, also crucial for maintaining the temporal and spatial coherence of bonded social groups. Using two sets of comparative data, we show that, in primates, the capacity to inhibit behaviour correlates better with the demands of social contexts than the demands of foraging contexts, whereas a more generalised capacity for causal reasoning correlates with both social and foraging contexts. In addition, we confirm the Passingham-Wise Conjecture that the capacity to inhibit prepotent action is unique to anthropoid primates, and suggest that it may be crucial for the spatio-temporal integrity of their unique bonded social groups.

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