Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Chimpanzees predict the hedonic outcome of novel taste combinations : The evolutionary origins of affective forecasting

Sauciuc, Gabriela-Alina LU and Persson, Tomas LU orcid (2020) In Frontiers in Psychology 11.
Abstract
Affective forecasting - predicting the emotional outcome of never-before experienced situations - is pervasive in our lives. When facing novel situations, we can quickly integrate bits and pieces of prior experiences to envisage possible scenarios and their outcomes, and what these might feel like. Such affective glimpses of the future often steer the decisions we make. By enabling principled decision-making in novel situations, affective forecasting confers the important adaptive advantage of eluding the potentially costly consequences of tackling such situations by trial-and-error. Affective forecasting has been hypothesized as uniquely human, yet, in a recent study we found suggestive evidence of this ability in an orangutan. To test... (More)
Affective forecasting - predicting the emotional outcome of never-before experienced situations - is pervasive in our lives. When facing novel situations, we can quickly integrate bits and pieces of prior experiences to envisage possible scenarios and their outcomes, and what these might feel like. Such affective glimpses of the future often steer the decisions we make. By enabling principled decision-making in novel situations, affective forecasting confers the important adaptive advantage of eluding the potentially costly consequences of tackling such situations by trial-and-error. Affective forecasting has been hypothesized as uniquely human, yet, in a recent study we found suggestive evidence of this ability in an orangutan. To test nonverbal subjects, we capitalized on culinary examples of affective forecasting and devised a behavioral test that required the subjects to make predictions about novel juice mixes produced from familiar ingredients. In the present study, we administered the same task to two chimpanzees and found that their performance was comparable to that of the previously tested orangutan and 10 humans, who served as a comparison group. To improve the comparability of human and animal performance, in the present study we also introduced a new approach to assessing if the subjects’ performance was indicative of affective forecasting, which relies exclusively on behavioral data. The results of the study open for the possibility that affective forecasting has evolved in the common ancestor of the great apes, providing Hominids with the adaptive advantage of e.g. quickly evaluating heterogeneous food patches using hedonic prediction. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
affective forecasting, decision making, episodic system, hedonic predictions, evolution of cooking
in
Frontiers in Psychology
volume
11
article number
549193
pages
13 pages
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85093531597
  • pmid:33192796
ISSN
1664-1078
DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2020.549193
project
Can great apes imagine cocktails?
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
368dac48-027e-4a3c-bd5c-94e5ac8d1608
date added to LUP
2017-09-26 13:40:29
date last changed
2022-04-25 02:42:57
@article{368dac48-027e-4a3c-bd5c-94e5ac8d1608,
  abstract     = {{Affective forecasting - predicting the emotional outcome of never-before experienced situations - is pervasive in our lives. When facing novel situations, we can quickly integrate bits and pieces of prior experiences to envisage possible scenarios and their outcomes, and what these might feel like. Such affective glimpses of the future often steer the decisions we make. By enabling principled decision-making in novel situations, affective forecasting confers the important adaptive advantage of eluding the potentially costly consequences of tackling such situations by trial-and-error. Affective forecasting has been hypothesized as uniquely human, yet, in a recent study we found suggestive evidence of this ability in an orangutan. To test nonverbal subjects, we capitalized on culinary examples of affective forecasting and devised a behavioral test that required the subjects to make predictions about novel juice mixes produced from familiar ingredients. In the present study, we administered the same task to two chimpanzees and found that their performance was comparable to that of the previously tested orangutan and 10 humans, who served as a comparison group. To improve the comparability of human and animal performance, in the present study we also introduced a new approach to assessing if the subjects’ performance was indicative of affective forecasting, which relies exclusively on behavioral data. The results of the study open for the possibility that affective forecasting has evolved in the common ancestor of the great apes, providing Hominids with the adaptive advantage of e.g. quickly evaluating heterogeneous food patches using hedonic prediction.}},
  author       = {{Sauciuc, Gabriela-Alina and Persson, Tomas}},
  issn         = {{1664-1078}},
  keywords     = {{affective forecasting; decision making; episodic system; hedonic predictions; evolution of cooking}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Psychology}},
  title        = {{Chimpanzees predict the hedonic outcome of novel taste combinations : The evolutionary origins of affective forecasting}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.549193}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fpsyg.2020.549193}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}