Thinking Like a Monkey
What do our primate cousins know and when do they know it? Researcher Laurie Santos is trying to read their minds
- By Jerry Adler
- Photographs by Sylwia Kapuscinski
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
"Make sure you don't both have your backs turned to the monkey at the same time," Santos warns the students. "Some of these monkeys will just rush the boxes."
Trial 1: After finally locating a suitable monkey, setting up the boxes and going through the pantomime with the grapes, Santos drifts back into the trees and watches as the monkey languidly scratches itself. Almost ostentatiously, it seems, the animal turns and looks out over the rocks to the sea.
Trials 2 and 3: No approach.
With her students, Santos tramps up and down the now-familiar hills, across a rocky isthmus, to the sounds of wind and crashing waves, chattering monkeys and the continual bang of metal lids slamming on the chow bins. Santos tries to enlist one young monkey gnawing a biscuit, only to be stared down by a nearby male that was about to mount a different female. "Don't worry," Santos says placatingly as she backs away, "she's gonna mate with you, I promise."
Trial 4: Boxes blow over, trial aborted.
Trial 5: As soon as the grapes are displayed, the monkey gets up and walks away.
Trial 6: Finally a monkey that seems interested. Actually, a little too interested. As the second student is approaching the boxes to move the grapes, the monkey gets off his haunches and walks swiftly toward her. "Turn around!" Santos calls. The student pivots, pulls herself up to her full height and stares right at the monkey. It snarls menacingly back at her; she shrieks and runs to hide behind a colleague. The monkey grabs both grapes and runs away, chewing.
Students must commit to a month in Puerto Rico, but it is the prerogative of the professor to fly home at the end of the first week. Before Santos leaves, she makes some modifications to the false-belief experiment, and by the end of the month she hears that it's working better. In the months after returning to New Haven, she begins to formulate some tentative conclusions about what she has found: monkeys can gauge the knowledge and intentions of others when they correspond to their own perceptions of reality, but they cannot make the leap to the concept of a false belief.
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Comments (8)
did you really have to point out her boyfriends education status? it was irrelevant to the entire article!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by maria on July 16,2012 | 01:18 AM
I love monkeys and a big fan of them every project i do its over monkeys.
Posted by makeda wilson on February 26,2009 | 02:11 PM
I may be 11 years old but can you give me an update about animal your monkeys behavior every once a week pleeeeeeaaaaaase i have to do this im doing personal research please :)
Posted by matthew Soto on February 18,2009 | 06:53 AM
Whether or not you liked this article, you'd love Laurie Santos. We took her course at Yale (yes, Sex Sex Sex...and evolution too). She was witty and delightful, and over 500 students raved. Go Laurie!
Posted by Stan Bernold on January 27,2008 | 11:44 PM
Props! I used this article for a school project.
Posted by Leaf ♪ on January 23,2008 | 11:32 PM
It's important to distinguish between apes and monkeys, and not simply say primates. I don't know about monkeys, but I do know an ape has been caught lying before. (I believe it was Koko - lying about who's feces was in the cage, she tried to blame it on her pet cat.) Doesn't telling a lie imply false belief?
Posted by Allison Lemke on January 14,2008 | 03:58 PM
Morality is a new concept evolving only in humans.
Posted by paul skillman on January 4,2008 | 11:58 AM
borek123456 They are not testing if the monkeys steal food. They already know that. They want to know if the monkeys understand that humans think (actually that anyone but themself thinks).
Posted by hej on January 2,2008 | 03:04 AM
are you really suggesting giving walmart more money, and are you really posting it in the smithsonian site? what's wrong with you, robert v?
Posted by someone on January 1,2008 | 12:02 AM
robert v seems to have a nice "false belief" of his own going.
Posted by jmc on January 1,2008 | 04:31 PM
So, if monkeys can't do it, then only humans can? WTF? How about the great apes? I think they can. Excuse me.... I KNOW they can.
Posted by Bren on December 31,2007 | 12:06 AM
if social security disappears previous funding could be spent on health clubs housing and companies such as walmart. this would keep the handicapped and elderly well. sincerely
Posted by robert v on December 29,2007 | 07:17 PM
Comments to trial 1 This case with stealing food is just too simple, every dog does the same, it does not have to be necessarily a primate, and if one properly tests humans, they do the same, just visit some elementary schools, in every class you will find somebody who steals food from the other pupils. This test actually shows something else, it confirms the uninterrupted row of passing this behavioral information over millions of years. The only reasonable test in this respect would be a row of similar tests with many different species, in order to find out in which organisms this behavior is normal, in what animals do not perform this behavior of stealing food. I have seen squirrels stealing food, cats do it. So the only one single test on apes is just too simple. One might expect a bit more from a professor.
Posted by borek123456 on December 21,2007 | 12:42 PM