articleScienceMar 2, 2006Closed access

Altruistic Helping in Human Infants and Young Chimpanzees

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Human beings routinely help others to achieve their goals, even when the helper receives no immediate benefit and the person helped is a stranger. Such altruistic behaviors (toward non-kin) are extremely rare evolutionarily, with some theorists even proposing that they are uniquely human. Here we show that human children as young as 18 months of age (prelinguistic or just-linguistic) quite readily help others to achieve their goals in a variety of different situations. This requires both an understanding of others' goals and an altruistic motivation to help. In addition, we demonstrate similar though less robust skills and motivations in three young chimpanzees.

Citation impact

1,627
total citations
FWCI
143.80
Percentile
100%
References
24
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Variety (cybernetics)
  • Helping behavior
  • Altruism (biology)
  • Social psychology
  • Developmental psychology
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
No related works found for this paper.