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Principal Investigator:
Nick P. Toth
Co-Director
CRAFT Stone Age Institute
Co-Investigator:
Kathy D. Schick
Co-Director
CRAFT Stone Age Institute
Co-Investigator:
E. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh
Lead Specialist
Great Ape Trust of Iowa |
Investigations of Skill
Acquisition and Site Formation Processes within Groups of
Stone Tool-Making Apes
OVERVIEW
This research will investigate the technological skills
and behaviors in modern apes in order to shed light on
human evolution and to understand better the development
of tool-making and tool-using skills in humans. This research
marks an important new stage in a long-term investigation
into the stone tool-making and tool-using abilities of
apes with the development of a specific focus on two main
aspects of their tool-related activities: 1) the acquisition
and improvement of stone tool-making skills among different
ape individuals and ape species over the course of five
years of tool-manufacturing and tool-using; and 2) the
dynamics of decision-making in tool-related activities,
including transport of stone and the manufacture, transport,
and use of tools in different places in the apes’ environments.
This research will investigate a diverse group of apes,
including bonobos, chimpanzees, and orangutans with differing
ages, differing language proficiency, and differing tool-related
experience. The research proposed here builds upon the
foundation of prior studies, using criteria developed through
experimentation for a fine-tuned assessment of stone tool-making
skill. It will build on a stone tool-manufacturing tradition
already established among the two adults in the bonobo
social group at Great Ape Trust of Iowa and ready to be
disseminated to two young offspring there. It will expand
our understanding of tool-making among apes through experiments
with orangutans at Great Ape Trust of Iowa and chimpanzees
at Great Ape Research Institute. The methodology employed
here is essentially an experimental archaeological approach,
in which the apes will make and use stone tools within
a social context of ape and human tool-makers. Their artifactual
products will be compared and contrasted to the artifactual
products made by prehistoric hominids as well as modern
humans.
Performance Sites:
» Great Ape Trust of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa
» Stone Age Institute, Bloomington ( Gosport), IN
» Great Ape Research Institute (GARI), Japan
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
» Culture Prefigures Cognition
in Pan/Homo Bonobos
» Cultural Apprenticeship:
Social Processes In The Ontogeny of Object Use in Pan paniscus
» Behavioral and Neuroanotomical
Asymmetries In Bonobos, Pan paniscus
» Development of Language,
Gesture and Play In Bonobos
» Comparative Analysis of
Orangutan and Bonobo Numerical Competence
» Basic Memory Processes In
Bonobos
» Conversational Vocal Exchanges
Among Bonobos
» Multimodal Analysis of Communicative
Behavior In Bonobos
» Investigations of Skill
Acquisition and Site Formation Processes with Groups of Stone-tool Making Apes
» Music Perception, Learning,
and Production In Apes
» Learning and Cognition Same
Different Conceptualization and Cross Modal Matching |