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Proc. R. Soc. B (2006) 273, 1223–1228
doi:10.1098/rspb.2005.3433
Published online 8 February 2006
Are capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella)
inequity averse?
Diane Dubreuil, Maria Silvia Gentile and Elisabetta Visalberghi*
Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche,
Via Ulisse Aldrovandi, 16/b, 00197 Roma, Italy
It has been reported that capuchin monkeys reject a less preferred food (LPF) when they see a partner
capuchin receive a more preferred food (PF) for performing the same task. This behaviour was taken as
evidence of ‘inequity aversion’, but an alternative hypothesis is that capuchins reject the LPF because of
the mere presence of the PF. We tested this hypothesis in a paradigm, which consisted of presenting two
different foods (one PF and one LPF) on a tray and allowing the capuchin to take only the LPF. Refusals to
initiate the trial and refusals to take and eat the LPF were higher when the PF was hidden (hiding
condition) and when the PF was accumulated in sight but out of reach of the subject (accumulation
condition) compared to when two pieces of LPF were placed on the tray (control condition). Interestingly,
the subject behaved as in the control condition when its partner was given and ate the PF (partner
condition). We argue that capuchins’ refusals were due to the frustration of seeing and not obtaining the
PF, and that seeing the partner eating increases the LPF acceptance.
Keywords: frustration; inequity; social facilitation; tufted capuchin monkeys
1. INTRODUCTION
People make choices on the basis of the options that are
available to them. For example, when a person is offered
two similar jobs, one with a high salary and the other with
a low salary, they will choose the high-salary job. However,
when only low salaries are offered this same person will
accept a low-salary job. The social context can affect
choices in rather complex ways. In human societies
decision making processes can be influenced by perceived
fairness: a person is more willing to judge something as fair
if they get the same as another individual gets. A person
may judge getting a low salary unfair if their colleague
(having the same expertise) gets a higher salary for the
same work. This difference in salary can be felt as
especially unfair if the better paid job requires no effort
at all.
Although the sense of unfairness, or inequity aversion,
seems an immediate and natural reaction, we know very
little about its underlying psychological mechanisms.
From a cognitive point of view, inequity aversion implies
a comparison between the balance of our own effort and
salary, and the balance of the effort and salary of the other
person. A mismatch between these balances is perceived
as unfair, either because it is advantageous or disadvantageous (Fehr & Schmidt 1999).
According to Brosnan & de Waal (2003), unfairness
refusal is not a human peculiarity, since it is also observed
in capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella), a socially tolerant
primate. In their experiment, capuchins were less likely to
perform an exchange for a less preferred food (LPF), i.e.
to give back to the experimenter a token for a piece of
* Author for correspondence (elisabetta.visalberghi@istc.cnr.it).
The electronic supplementary material is available at http://dx.doi.
org/10.1098/rspb.2005.3433 or via http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.
uk.
Received 4 August 2005
Accepted 27 November 2005
cucumber, if they witnessed a partner exchanging a token
for grape, a more preferred food (PF) (inequality
condition). Moreover, capuchins refused more frequently
to exchange the token, or to accept the food that they
received in exchange for the token, when the partner
received a grape without having to perform an exchange
(effort control condition). According to the authors,
capuchins perceived the above conditions as unfair and
showed inequity aversion.
In analogy with what we described above, if the
capuchins’ behaviour was due to inequity aversion, we
would have to assume a cascade of mental processes.
A capuchin monkey would have to perceive of a relation
between relations, i.e. to compare the relation between its
own effort and reward (one token for one cucumber) with
the relation between the partner’s effort and reward (one
token for one grape, or no effort for one grape). Only
human beings, chimpanzees and to some extent baboons
have to date been found capable of solving tasks in which
the ability to perceive relations between relations is
necessary (Fagot et al. 2001; for a review of the literature
see Tomasello & Call 1997; Thompson & Oden 2000).
Although relations between relations have not been
tested in capuchins yet, Spinozzi & Natale (1989) showed
that capuchins, in contrast to chimpanzees and 18–24
month old infants, do not perform second-order classifications, the latter being considered as the premise for
perceiving relations between relations (Langer 1980,
1986; Spinozzi 1993).
These considerations suggest that simpler cognitive
mechanisms might explain the results of Brosnan & de
Waal (2003). And indeed, upon closer inspection, their
interpretation based on inequity aversion is not well
supported by their own data (Wynne 2004). Specifically,
the authors did not find a statistical difference between
their inequality condition, in which the partner exchanged
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1224 D. Dubreuil and others
Are capuchin monkeys inequity averse?
a token for a more PF, and their food control condition, in
which the partner was not present and the more PF was
accumulated in view but out of reach of the subject (fig. 1;
Brosnan & de Waal 2003). The high number of refusals
when there was no partner (i.e. when the subject could not
experience that the partner had a better deal than itself )
and cognitive complexity of perceiving relations between
relations call for an interpretation of capuchins’ behaviour
alternative to ‘inequity aversion’. In particular, it is
possible that capuchins were simply expecting their
exchange to be rewarded with the (always in view)
more PF.
Instrumental learning is based on the expectation of a
specific outcome following a specific action (Watanabe
et al. 2001). Animals expect outcomes and their
behaviour changes when an expected outcome changes
(Tinklepaugh 1928; Watanabe et al. 2001). It is known
that mammals experience an egocentric effect, traditionally called frustration (Papini 2003) in response to the
absence, or delay, of the reward that is usually given in the
situation associated with its impending presentation
(monkeys: Tinklepaugh 1928; Amsel 1958; for review
on diverse mammals and birds: Amsel 1992; Papini &
Dudley 1997; Papini 2003). Therefore, it is possible that
Brosnan and de Waal’s capuchins were expecting the more
PF and when they did not receive it, they experienced
frustration.
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether
the mere presence of a more PF affects the acceptance of a
LPF. Our paradigm did not require capuchins to exchange
tokens for food but consisted of showing a PF and a LPF
to the subject, and allowing it to take only the less
preferred one.
2. MATERIAL AND METHODS
(a) Subjects
We tested six capuchin monkeys (two males and four
females). The males were 8 and 7 years old, and the females
were 18, 13, 6 and 4 years old. All subjects were laboratoryborn except the 13 year old female which was wild-born.
The subjects were housed in three different groups (group
size ranges from 2 to 5 individuals) in indoor–outdoor cages,
connected by sliding doors (indoor cage: 3.0!3.0 m, 2.5 m
high; outdoor cage: 3.0!3.0 m, 2.5 m high). Cages were
furnished with perches and slides; a variety of plastic toys and
wooden blocks were given on a daily basis. Testing occurred
in the indoor cages.
In the morning, capuchins received grains, pumpkin
seeds, peanuts, and, three times a week, a spoonful of a
mixture of curd cheese, vitamins, eggs, bran, oats and sugar.
In the afternoon, they received the main feed consisting of
monkey chow (Altromin-A pellets, Rieper standard diet for
primates), fresh fruits (apples, oranges, pears, etc.) and
vegetables (salad, carrots, onions, etc.). Test sessions were
run from 11.00 to 14.00.
(b) Experimental set-up
Foods were presented to the monkeys on a Plexiglas tray
(27!40 cm), which was divided in half by a Plexiglas divider,
perpendicular to the tray (27!1!9 cm high). This apparatus
had a plastic handle on each side, permitting easy handling.
The tray had a 0.5 cm deep hollow (1.5 cm diameter) on both
sides of the divider, 15 cm from one another. Food items were
Proc. R. Soc. B (2006)
placed in each hollow during the experiment. The tray was
placed on a trolley (104 cm high) and could be moved within
reach of the capuchins. Two transparent plastic bowls (21 cm
diameter, 11 cm high) were attached to the rear of the trolley
and their content could be seen by the subjects. Each bowl
was filled up to about one-third of one type of food; according
to the condition, either one bowl contained the PF and the
other bowl the LPF, or both bowls contained the LPF. Thus,
during the trials, the subject saw the two pieces of food placed
in the front part of the tray and the two bowls containing the
food on the rear of the trolley.
(c) Procedure
(i) Preliminary phase
Food preference test. During a dichotomous choice test, each
subject had to choose one of two different food items of
similar size. The subject was tested alone in an indoor cage.
The food items were placed on the tray and were offered to
the capuchin by moving the tray towards the wire mesh of its
cage to allow her/him to take one piece of food. Each subject
received two 30-trial sessions on 2 days. The location of the
food items was counterbalanced between trials. In this
dichotomous test, the PF needed to be chosen in each
session at least 85% of the trials, and the LPF no more than
15% of the trials. On this basis, we chose the LPF to be apple
for all subjects, and the PF to be a raisin for four subjects and
a peanut for two subjects.
To present foods of similar size, we presented half a
peanut, sliced apple (cubes) and a whole raisin to the
capuchins. During the experimental phase, the bowls placed
on the trolley in front of the subject were one-third filled with
apple cubes, peanuts, or raisins.
Familiarization with the experimental conditions. As capuchins were tested in pairs in one of the experimental
conditions, it was necessary to ensure that the subject
tolerated a partner being given food and eating it before the
subject’s turn started, and that the partner was willing to eat
despite the close vicinity of the subject. For this purpose, we
carried out two sessions to familiarize the capuchins to the
experimental conditions and to assess their mutual tolerance.
If the presence of one individual prevented the other from
taking and eating the food in a relaxed way, the two
individuals were not considered as tolerant of one another
and the pairing was excluded from the study. On this basis,
our six subjects formed three compatible pairs: two pairs were
formed by females (two mother–daughter pairs) and one by
males (two brothers).
The pair members were placed in two adjacent indoor
cages separated by a concrete wall and by a Plexiglas window
(80!60!1 cm) that allowed them to see and hear each
other. After about 5 min, the experimenter (D.D. or M.S.G)
stood in front of the cages (near to the Plexiglas windows) and
placed two pieces of LPF on the tray; both bowls on the
trolley were filled with LPF. When the two capuchins were
both in front of the experimenter, she handed one of the two
pieces of LPF to one of them (the partner) through the wire
mesh. While the partner ate it, the experimenter moved the
tray close to the cage of the other capuchin (the subject) and
offered the remaining LPF. As soon as the subject took the
LPF, the experimenter moved backwards and waited at least
for 30 s before starting a new trial. This procedure continued
for 15–25 presentations, according to the capuchins’ level of
attention. Each capuchin received two sessions as partner and
two sessions as subject.
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Are capuchin monkeys inequity averse? D. Dubreuil and others
(ii) Experimental phase
All capuchin monkeys were tested in four experimental
conditions. In three conditions, the subject was tested alone,
and in one condition the subject was tested while its partner
was in the nearby cage. Conditions were presented in a
pseudo-random order to each subject. In all four conditions,
at least 30 s passed between two consecutive trials. Each
subject received two sessions of 25 trials for each experimental condition. Since the experiment required the subjects to
be mildly hungry (so that the LPF could be accepted, or
refused) and since our experiment was run shortly before
their main feed (when capuchins are hungry), the subjects
received a snack (a few pieces of carrot, orange, and pellets)
20–30 min before the testing to increase their food selectivity.
In the control condition, at the start of a trial, two pieces of
LPF were presented to the subject, one on both sides of the
tray. Both bowls were filled with LPF. The experimenter took
one of the two pieces of LPF, showed it to the capuchin, and
hid it in her pocket. The tray was then moved close to the wire
mesh to allow the subject to take the remaining piece of LPF.
In the hiding condition, at the start of a trial, one piece of
PF was placed on one side of the tray and one piece of LPF
was placed on the other side of the tray. One bowl was filled
with PF and the other bowl with LPF. The experimenter took
the PF, showed it to the capuchin and hid it in her pocket.
The tray was then moved close to the cage to allow the
capuchin to take the LPF.
In the accumulation condition, a transparent bowl was
placed on the floor of the adjacent cage, a few centimetres in
front of the Plexiglas window. At the start of a trial, one piece
of PF was placed on one side of the tray and one piece of LPF
was placed on the other side of the tray. One bowl was filled
with PF and the other bowl with LPF. The experimenter took
the PF, showed it to the subject and while it was watching
placed it in the transparent bowl in the adjacent cage. The
tray was then moved close to the wire mesh to allow the
subject to take the LPF. Thus, trial after trial, the PF
accumulated in the bowl, out of reach but in view of the
subject.
In the partner condition, the partner was in the adjacent
cage. At the start of a trial, one piece of PF was placed on one
side of the tray and one piece of LPF was placed on the other
side of the tray. One bowl was filled with PF and the other
bowl with LPF. The experimenter took the PF, showed it to
the subject and gave it to the partner while the subject was
watching. The tray was then moved close to the wire mesh to
allow the subject to take the remaining LPF.
(d) Behaviours scored
All sessions were videotaped using a digital video-camera
Canon MV650i. M.S.G scored the data from the tapes. To
assess inter- and intra-observer reliability, 12.5% of the
sessions were independently scored by M.S.G and D.D.
Agreement was 100% for refusals. The latencies taken by the
two observers, or by the same observer twice, differed in only
9 and 5% of the trials; the difference between codings was
never greater than 1 s.
We scored two types of latencies and two types of refusals.
The latency to initiate a trial (LatI) was the time elapsed from
the moment the experimenter placed the pieces of food on the
tray until when the subject stood in front of the tray, ready to
begin the test. As the experimental cages were large, this
latency reflects the motivation of the subject to participate in
the experiment. Refusal to initiate the test (RI) was scored
Proc. R. Soc. B (2006)
1225
when the LatI was more than 90 s. The latency to take the
LPF (LatT) was the time elapsed from the moment the
experimenter moved the tray with the remaining LPF close to
the subject’s cage until the subject took the LPF. Refusal to
take the LPF (RT) was scored when LatT was more than 10 s.
(e) Data analysis
Since the data were not normally distributed, we used nonparametric tests for analyses. For assessing the correlation
between LatI or LatT, and the order of trials, we performed
Spearman Rank correlations. Both differences in LatI and in
LatT across conditions were tested with two Friedman
ANOVAs. To assess differences in LatI or in LatT between
conditions, we carried out Wilcoxon matched pairs tests.
Total refusals were the number of refusals to initiate the trial
plus the number of refusals to take and eat the food, scored in
each condition for each subject, and were compared using a
Chi-square test. Since the analysis showed similar trends for
RI and RT, we present them as pooled data.
The significance level was set at aZ0.05. When multiple
comparisons were made, we controlled the family wise error
rate by modifying the significance level of a, designated in the
text as a a (aZa/c, where aZ0.05, and c corresponds to the
number of comparisons). In particular, we performed four
comparisons between conditions: we compared the control
condition with each of the other conditions, and since the aim
of the present study was to investigate whether the presence of
a more PF affects the acceptance of a LPF, we also compared
the hiding condition (in which the PF was hidden) with the
accumulation condition (in which the PF was accumulated in
sight of the subject).
3. RESULTS
(a) Latencies and order of trials
In the hiding, accumulation, and partner conditions,
latencies to initiate a trial significantly increased as the
session progressed (rsZ0.442, nZ25, p!0.05; rsZ0.69,
nZ25, p!0.001; rsZ0.73, nZ25, p!0.001, respectively;
figure 1). No such trend was evident in the control
condition (rsZ0.23, nZ25, n.s.). LatT correlated with the
order of trials only in the accumulation condition
(rsZ0.44, nZ25, p!0.05). Please see electronic supplementary material file for a comparison of the latencies
scored in the two sessions.
(b) Differences among conditions
As shown in figure 2, LatI and LatT differed across
conditions (Friedman test, LatI: c23 Z 30:22, nZ25,
p!0.0001; LatT: c23 Z 32:568, nZ25, p!0.0001). In
particular, capuchins took significantly longer to initiate a
trial in the hiding and in the accumulation conditions
compared to in the control condition (figure 2a,
ZZK2.54, nZ25, pZ0.011, aZ0.013; ZZK3.54,
nZ25, pZ0.0004, aZ0.013, respectively), whereas the
partner condition did not differ from the control condition
(ZZK2.018, nZ25, n.s.). Moreover, there was a longer
LatI in the accumulation condition than in the hiding
condition (ZZK2.75, nZ25, p!0.006, aZ0.013).
Capuchins took significantly longer to take the LPF in
the hiding and accumulation conditions than in the
control condition (figure 2b, ZZ4.35, nZ25, p!0.0001,
aZ0.013; ZZK3.43, nZ25, pZ0.0006, aZ0.013,
respectively), whereas the partner condition did not differ
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latency to initiate the trial (s)
(a) 50
Are capuchin monkeys inequity averse?
control condition
hiding condition
accumulation condition
partner condition
40
30
20
10
(a)
latency to initiate a trial (s)
1226 D. Dubreuil and others
30
*
*
25
20
15
10
5
control condition
hiding condition
accumulation condition
partner condition
3
2
latency to take and eat the LPF (s)
(b)
4
3
*
*
2
1
0
1
1
3
5
7
9
control
11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25
order of trials
Figure 1. (a) Correlation between the average latency to
initiate a trial (LatI) and the order of trials during a session
(the first and the second sessions of a condition are analysed
together). LatI increased significantly across the session in the
hiding, accumulation and partner conditions. No correlation
between LatI and the order of trials was observed in the
control condition. (b) Correlation between the average
latency to take and eat the less preferred food (LatT) and
the order of trials during a session (the first and the second
sessions of a condition are analysed together). No correlation
between LatT and the order of trials was observed in any
condition.
from the control condition (ZZK2.34, nZ25, n.s.). LatT
was not significantly different between the hiding and
accumulation conditions (ZZK1.94, nZ25, n.s.).
Refusals (figure 3) were significantly higher in the
hiding and in the accumulation conditions compared to
the control condition (c21 Z 10:68, nZ51, pZ0.001,
aZ0.013; c21 Z 20:07, nZ62, p!0.0001, aZ0.013,
respectively), whereas the partner condition did not differ
from the control condition (c21 Z 0:03, nZ29, n.s.). No
significant difference was found between the hiding and
the accumulation conditions (c21 Z 1:74, nZ85, n.s.).
hiding
accumulation
condition
partner
Figure 2. (a) Average latency to initiate a trial (LatI) in the
control, hiding, accumulation and partner conditions. LatI
was significantly longer in the hiding and accumulation
conditions than in the control condition, whereas LatI in the
partner condition was not significantly different from LatI in
the control condition. LatI in the accumulation condition was
significantly longer than LatI in the hiding condition. (b)
Average latency to take and eat the less preferred food (LatT)
in the control, hiding, accumulation and partner conditions.
LatT was significantly longer in the hiding and accumulation
conditions than in the control condition, whereas LatT in the
partner condition was not significantly different from LatT in
the control condition. The longest average latency was
observed in the hiding condition. p!0.013.
30
25
total refusals (%)
latency to take and eat the LPF (s)
*
0
0
(b)
35
% RT
% RI
20
*
*
15
10
5
4. DISCUSSION
(a) Decrease of motivation due to the mere
presence of a more preferred food
In all conditions, apart from the control condition,
capuchins took longer to initiate a trial as the session
progressed, which indicates that they became less
motivated over time. Satiety cannot account for the
reduction of motivation since in the control condition
the LatI did not change as the session progressed. This
finding suggests that capuchins perceived the hiding, the
Proc. R. Soc. B (2006)
0
control
hiding
accumulation
partner
condition
Figure 3. Percentage of total refusals: total refusals to initiate
a trial (RI, black with white dots) and to take and eat the less
preferred food (RT, white with black dashes) in each
condition. The percentage of total refusals in the hiding and
accumulation conditions differed significantly from that of
the control condition. p!0.001.
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Are capuchin monkeys inequity averse? D. Dubreuil and others
accumulation and the partner conditions as frustrating.
The common feature across these conditions was the
presence of the preferred but out of reach food (on the tray
and inside the bowls). In addition, the finding that the
accumulation condition was the most frustrating (as
shown by the highest average LatI) suggests that seeing
an additional bowl in which the PF is accumulated in view
of the subject increases its frustration. It is possible that
the monkey perceived the food in the bowls as ‘belonging’
to the experimenter (Kummer & Cords 1991), and the
food in the nearby cage as something available.
There is evidence that the omission of an expected
reward elicits frustration. Rats and pigeons show an
‘escape-from-frustration phenomenon’ when an appetitive reinforcer is not given (or is reduced in magnitude or
quality) while the signals for its impending presentation
are present (Papini & Dudley 1997). In the laboratory,
monkeys are generally used to receiving the food that
experimenters handle in front of them. Such situations
occur for experimental purposes such as food preference
tests, and during the routine provisioning of food.
Therefore, seeing the PF can well lead to the expectation
that it can be obtained. Consequently, we argue that our
subjects faced a quality impairment of the reward when
they only received the LPF, which was a cause of
frustration. In support of this view, we occasionally
observed distress vocalizations and stereotyped pacing,
especially in the hiding and accumulation conditions.
Experiments aimed to induce frustration by omitting the
expected reward (Lyons et al. 2000; Papini 2003) similarly
report stereotyped behaviours in rats and monkeys. Thus,
it seems plausible that the presence of a PF when a LPF is
given is enough to elicit frustration and to induce
unwillingness to accept the latter.
(b) Socially facilitated acceptance of a less
preferred food
The comparison of the partner condition with the control
condition allows an assessment of the impact of the social
context on the acceptance of the LPF. The presence of a
partner eating a PF appears to make the LPF more
acceptable despite the presence of the PF. In fact, no
refusals of the LPF occurred in the partner condition:
whenever capuchins initiated a trial, they also ate the LPF.
Therefore, the partner strongly affects the subject’s
response towards the LPF. Why is this so?
The phenomenon of social facilitation of eating, i.e. the
increased likelihood of eating when somebody else is
eating, can account for the above results. Visalberghi &
Addessi (2000) demonstrated that capuchins increase
their acceptance of a novel food (novel foods are generally
eaten with caution and in small amounts) when they see
group members eating the same food. This phenomenon
occurs also when the subject and the partner eat different
foods (Addessi & Visalberghi 2001; Galloway et al. 2005).
Moreover, we believe that the fact that the partner is
offered a PF induces the subject to come to the tray (i.e. to
initiate its trial) but decreases its willingness to immediately take the LPF, given what the partner has received.
Nevertheless, as soon as the subject accepts the food, its
eating response becomes socially facilitated.
Our partner condition can be compared with the
Inequality condition of Brosnan & de Waal’s study
(2003). The main difference between both studies is that
Proc. R. Soc. B (2006)
1227
in the latter study the monkeys had to exchange a token in
order to receive the food. However, in both studies the
subject and the partner did the same thing and received
different rewards; therefore, in both cases the subject faced
‘unfairness’. Whereas our subjects did not refuse to eat the
food after having initiated the trial, Brosnan & de Waal’s
capuchins did. In the latter study, the subjects first had to
give a token to the experimenter in order to be rewarded;
this exchange required time and led to a mismatch in
timing between when the partner and the subject ate.
Since the partner ate before the food was given to the
subject, the eating behaviour of the latter could not be
socially facilitated. In contrast, in our study the eating
behaviour of the two monkeys were likely to overlap.
(c) Concluding remarks
Do our results suggest that capuchin monkeys refuse
inequity? We will briefly discuss which of the following
possibilities is more likely. Inequity is prompted: (i) by the
food options apparently available and/or (ii) by what the
partner receives. Although both these points require
proper investigation, our results indicate that the presence
of the PF plays a major role in decreasing the acceptance
of a LPF (in the control condition, when the LPF was the
only food they could see, our capuchins were willing to
receive it). We ignored whether in the absence of the
experimenter (who causes the inequity by rewarding the
subject with a low quality food), capuchins would behave
the same. For sure, an adult human facing an experimenter who hands out a low-quality reward when a highquality one seems available, might think that the
experimenter is unfair and feels frustrated. Would a
human attribute ‘unfairness’ to a vending machine, too?
Probably not, but they would certainly experience
frustration, as rats and pigeons do even when tested in
the absence of the experimenter (for review Papini 2003).
Finally, Brosnan & de Waal’s results (2003) also
support our interpretation that seeing the partner
exchanging a token for a more PF is not mandatory to
induce the subject’s willingness to accept the LPF (or, as
the authors label it, to experience ‘inequity aversion’). In
fact, the number of refusals observed in the inequality
condition (when the partner had to exchange the token for
a PF) and in the food control condition (when there was
no partner and the PF was accumulated in the adjacent
cage in sight of the subject) did not differ. Future
experiments should control for the possibility that the
presence of the PF affects the acceptance of the LPF by
devaluing it. This hypothesis is parsimonious and does not
require the ability of perceiving a relation between
relations, i.e. comparing the relation between its own
effort and reward and the relation between the partner’s
effort and reward, which has not been demonstrated in
capuchin monkeys yet.
We thank Carlotta Maggio for help with data collection and
all animal caretakers for their assistance with the animals. We
also thank Francesco Natale and Flavia Chiarotti for
statistical advice and useful comments. We thank as well
Elsa Addessi and Camillo Padoa-Schioppa and the anonymous referees for their helpful comments. We thank Annika
Paukner for revising the English and providing her comments. We are grateful to the Bioparco Foundation for
hosting the laboratory, where the experiment was carried out
and to the Fondation Fyssen that provided Diane Dubreuil
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1228 D. Dubreuil and others
Are capuchin monkeys inequity averse?
with a post-doctoral fellowship. This study was supported by
the grant RBNE01SZB4 from FIRB/MIUR. This experiment
was conducted in compliance with all current Italian laws on
the ethical standards of the treatment of animals.
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