Consolation and cooperation: A proximate analysis of social behavior in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) Pubblico
Plotnik, Joshua (2010)
Abstract
Did seemingly rare cognitive capacities in humans and non-human
primates
evolve convergently in other, more distantly related species? Did
this perhaps happen in
the elephant, an animal widely known for its social complexity
despite the lack of
systematic evidence? Following our recent demonstration of mirror
self-recognition
(considered a hallmark of self-awareness correlated with advanced
empathy) in Asian
elephants (Plotnik et al. 2006), we conducted this dissertation
research to further assess
this species' cognitive complexity adapting techniques designed
originally for use in the
study of primate social cognition. First, we studied the elephant's
capacity for consolation
(i.e. reassurance of distressed individuals) in a semi-free
sanctuary in Thailand. We found
that elephants not only consoled each other following displays of
distress, but bystander
elephants also seemed to adopt the emotional state of the focal
individual, suggesting
emotional contagion. Second, we conducted an experimental study to
investigate whether
or not elephants could learn how to cooperate when both a partner's
presence and actions
were needed for success. In a task that required two elephants to
each pull one of two
rope ends to retrieve a food reward, elephants learned not only to
wait for their partner's
arrival before pulling, but also to inhibit pulling if their
partner could not help. These
studies suggest that elephants rely on complex cognitive
evaluations in their social
interactions, not unlike what we know for nonhuman primates, and
that further attention
to intelligent non-primates may provide important insight into the
convergent evolution
of social behavior.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
A General Perspective on Social and Cognitive Complexity in Elephants 3
Wild and Captive Experimental Evidence 3
Ethological Evidence from the Wild 10
Cooperation in Non-Human Animals and Attention to Levels of Analysis 11
Investigation I: Bystander Post-Distress Affiliations and Consolation in Elephants 13
An Ethological Study of Social Complexity 13
Studying Consolation and Cooperation in Tandem 16
Distress as a Focal Behavior 21
General Methods 23
Subjects 23
General Data Collection 25
Consolation Data Collection 28
Data Entry and Analysis 31
Primary Predictions 32
Results 33
Discussion 37
Investigation II: An Experimental Study of Elephant Cooperative Behavior 45
General Methods 49
Subjects 49
Experimental Setup 49
General Procedure 51
Condition I: Simultaneous Release 53
Prediction 53
Procedure and Results 54
Condition II: Delayed Release 54
Prediction 54
Procedure 54
Results 55
Prediction Evaluated 59
Condition III: No-Rope Control 60
Prediction 60
Procedure and Results 60
Prediction Evaluated 62
Discussion 62
General Discussion 69
Consolation and Cooperation Revisited 69
Limitations 72
Convergent Cognitive Evolution 73
A Note on Conservation 75
References 77
Appendix A 90
Appendix B 91
Appendix C 93
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