A first-of-its-kind study suggests bonobos, like humans, can understand someone else’s lack of knowledge—and adjust their ...
The study provides clear evidence that apes can intuit another's ignorance, a trait once thought uniquely human.
An experiment shows that bonobos can understand when a human lacks knowledge and point them in the right direction ...
Apes don’t just act on instinct—they recognize when someone lacks information and actively help them out! In a controlled ...
Some great apes realize when a human partner doesn’t know something and are capable of communicating information to them to ...
A recent experiment found that bonobos can understand when a human lacks knowledge and will often step in to help a human out. Host Marco Werman spoke with Chris Krupenye, an evolutionary cognitive ...
Bonobo apes are very similar to the more widely recognized chimpanzees—a smaller species of ape native to the Congo region of ...
Krupenye and co-author Luke Townrow, a Johns Hopkins Ph.D. student, worked with three male bonobos, Nyota, 25; Kanzi, 43; and Teco, 13, all living at Ape Initiative, a research and education ...
To investigate this, Townrow and Christopher Krupenye, also at Johns Hopkins University, tested if three male bonobos at the Ape Initiative research centre in Iowa could identify ignorance in ...
When the person knew where the grapes were hidden, the bonobos waited calmly for the person to retrieve them. "What we've shown here is that apes will communicate with a partner to change their ...
The study involved three male bonobos, all living at an education nonprofit called the Ape Initiative. During each ...