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Study shows friendly social behaviors are contagious for chimpanzees

Friendly social behaviors are contagious for chimpanzees
Don and Duncan playing (Chimfunshi Wildlife Orphanage, Group 2). Credit: Dr. Jake Brooker, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Chimpanzees are more likely to engage in play or groom each other if they see others performing these social behaviors first, Georgia Sandars and colleagues at Durham University, U.K. report in a study published November 20, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE.

Whether it's yawning or keeping watch for predators, many animals鈥攊ncluding primates and ravens鈥攆ind certain behaviors contagious: after seeing another member of their group performing one of these behaviors, they will instinctively perform it too. This 'behavioral ' is thought to help animal groups reinforce their and stay in sync.

Chimpanzees' behavior and emotions can be influenced by those around them, but whether they experience contagion of friendly social behaviors, such as and play, has not previously been investigated.

To address this knowledge gap, researchers observed the behavior of 41 chimpanzees living in a sanctuary in Zambia. They found that chimpanzees of all ages, ranks and sexes displayed contagion of grooming and playful behaviors. Chimpanzees were more likely to find grooming behavior contagious when they observed it in another individual that they had a close relationship with.

In contrast, play behavior was more contagious in younger chimpanzees, but this contagion was unaffected by the strength of the social .

Play contagion video (Debbie). Credit: Georgia Sandars

Behavioral contagion of friendly behaviors like grooming and play may help to strengthen social bonds, the authors say. Play is an important part of social and behavioral development for young chimpanzees, whereas adults tend to build and repair by grooming each other, which may explain the differences in contagion between the two behaviors.

There are several possible explanations for why adult find the behavior of individuals they have a close social relationship with more contagious: they may pay more attention to or be more strongly influenced by their close friends, or seeing a close friend grooming someone else may cause jealousy.

The authors add, "Chimpanzees 'catch' social behavior from each other; they are more likely to start grooming and playing after having just seen others groom and play."

More information: Sandars G, Brooker JS, Clay Z, ChimpanSEE, ChimpanDO: Grooming and play contagion in chimpanzees. PLOS ONE (2024).

Journal information: PLoS ONE

Citation: Study shows friendly social behaviors are contagious for chimpanzees (2024, November 20) retrieved 21 July 2025 from /news/2024-11-friendly-social-behaviors-contagious-chimpanzees.html
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