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Tip
Sheet: Culture & Living

Tip sheets highlight timely news and events at Washington University in St. Louis. For more information on any of the stories below or for assistance in arranging interviews, please see the contact information listed with each story. For comments on the Culture & Living news tips service, please contact the editor, Sue Killenberg McGinn at (314) 935-5254 or
susan_killenberg_mcginn@aismail.wustl.edu.
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Humans may not be as aggressive and competitive as thought

Media assistance:
Susan Killenberg McGinn
- (314) 935-5254
Related: Record story: Robert W. Sussman honored as AAAS fellow
Related: Op-ed by Robert Sussman: "Use anthropologists to promote better race relations"
Related: Robert Sussman's Web page
[St. Louis, Mo., 3-1-02] - Is
it human nature to be competitive? Aggressive? Violent?
Popular and scientific literature says yes. An anthropologist
at Washington University in St. Louis who studies
primate behavior says no.
Robert W. Sussman, Ph.D., professor of anthropology
in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in
St. Louis, and a colleague found that affiliative behavior
-- or friendly behavior like grooming and playing
-- is probably a hundred times more frequent than
aggressive behavior in primates, and that aggressive
behavior constitutes less than 1 percent of primates'
activities.
Sussman and Paul A. Garber, Ph.D., a former graduate
student of Sussman's who is now chair and professor
of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
did a survey of the literature and followed that up
with real-life observations. They had two questions:
How much time do primates in general spend in social
behavior, and how much of this social behavior is
spent in aggressive interaction?
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Is aggressive behavior less common than thought? |
"The basic premise right now about animals that
live in groups -- including humans -- is that they
are constantly competing for resources. It's a simplistic
view of Darwinian survival of the fittest, but many
scientists have taken it on. They state that almost
all behavior is related to how animals strategize
to compete with one another so that they can gain
more resources and reproduce more. We think this is
a very narrow and unsophisticated view of evolutionary
theory," says Sussman, who is immediate past
editor of The American Anthropologist.
In fact, Sussman says he and his colleagues are bucking
a trend.
"We found in almost all species across the board,
from diurnal lemurs -- the most primitive primates
-- to apes, that less than 10 percent of their day
and usually less than 5 percent of their day is spent
in any active social behavior whatsoever," Sussman
said. Social behavior, unlike everyday maintenance
behavior like feeding and traveling, can be any kind
of interaction such as touching, fighting or grooming,
Sussman explained.
"Then we looked at the aggressive behavior of
primates and found that usually less than 1 percent
of their day is spent fighting or competing, and it's
usually much less than 1 percent. Basically, what
animals do is they interact in a general, coordinated
way. There is not a lot of social behavior but most
of the social behavior is affiliative, and we find
that aggressive behavior is extremely rare, even in
baboons, thought to be among the most aggressive primates."
Sussman and Garber presented their results at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS) in February.
This symposium was part of a series of research conferences
exploring the biological roots of human nature from
a multidisciplinary perspective. Sussman is a consultant
to the AAAS Program of Dialogue on Science, Ethics
and Religion, which has been conducting these conferences
and symposia over the past three years.
Sussman's research includes a long-term study
of the demography, ecology and social organization
of the ring-tailed lemur at the Beza Mahafaly Reserve,
which he co-founded, in southwest Madagascar.
In addition to studying the literature, Sussman wanted
to observe primates' interactions firsthand. Last
summer in Madagascar, Sussman, a Malagasy student
and two Japanese researchers each studied one lemur
from sunup to sundown.
"We had four different people looking at four
different animals all day to see how many social interactions
and fights the animals got into throughout the day.
Again it fit exactly what we had found in the literature:
Less than 5 percent of the behavior of the animals was social and there was almost no aggression.
"The two Japanese researchers had been at the
site studying these animals for 14 months," Sussman
added. "They were amazed after observing just
one throughout a day. They said they couldn't
believe it, when they looked at one animal, how little
it interacted. They hadn't put it in that context
before."
Sussman said the daylong observation demonstrates
the importance of putting the interactions into context.
Of the aggressive interactions among the four animals
being observed, all were considered to be events,
which are instantaneous happenings, as opposed to
bouts, which are measured in time.
And the most frequent agonistic interaction was when
two animals got to the same place at the same time.
"They only had one of two alternatives,"
Sussman observed. "They could either greet one
another or have a short spat just because they had
to do something. It was almost by happenstance: Well,
what do I do now?' So rather than greeting, which
would be putting their noses together or something
like that, they might have a short spat and that was
basically all of the aggressive interaction.
"Essentially what I am saying is people haven't
studied the context of aggression and social behavior
and affiliation to see how they all relate and actually
organize the animal's life. That is something we want
to do," Sussman said.
"Aggression may be just sort of a byproduct of
being social, not the driving factor of how we organize
our social life," Sussman added. "And altruism
and affiliation may be much more important as an organizing
factor in primate social interactions. This kind of
research may help us understand the altruistic behavior
we observed by strangers after Sept. 11."
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