Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Want a better deal? Try monkey as your shopping partner

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Dec, 2014 10:10 AM
    Monkeys are smarter than humans when it comes to shopping as they do not confuse the price tag of a good with its quality, an interesting study from Yale University shows.
     
    Senior Study author Laurie Santos, psychologist at Yale University and Rhia Catapano, former Yale undergraduate, designed a series of four experiments to test whether capuchin monkeys would prefer higher-priced but equivalent items.
     
    They taught monkeys to make choices in an experimental market and to buy novel foods at different prices.
     
    The results showed that monkeys understood the differences in price between the foods.
     
    “But when we tested whether monkeys preferred the taste of the higher-priced goods, we were surprised to find that the monkeys did not show the same bias as humans,” researchers observed.
     
    “Our previous work has shown that monkeys are loss-averse, irrational when it comes to dealing with risk and even prone to rationalising their own decisions, just like humans,” Santos said.
     
    “But this is one of the first domains we have tested in which monkeys show more rational behaviour than humans do,” he added.
     
    Previous research showed that people think a wine labeled with an expensive price tag tastes better than the same wine labeled with a cheaper price tag.
     
    In other studies, people thought a painkiller worked better when they paid a higher price for it.
     
    The new study shows that monkeys do not buy that premise although they share other irrational behaviours with their human relatives.
     
    For humans, higher price tags often signal that other people like a particular good.
     
    “Our richer social experiences with markets might be the very thing that leads us - and not monkeys - astray in this case,” Santos concluded.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Have you tried the 'Donut selfie' yet?

    Have you tried the 'Donut selfie' yet?
    Are you tired of posting those drab still selfies on your Facebook or Instagram account? A new form of video selfie called the 'Donut selfie'...

    Have you tried the 'Donut selfie' yet?

    How the birth season can trigger mood disorders

    How the birth season can trigger mood disorders
    People born at certain times of year may have a greater chance of developing certain types of affective temperaments which, in turn, could...

    How the birth season can trigger mood disorders

    Playing action video games boost motor skills

    Playing action video games boost motor skills
    People who play action video games such as Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed are quicker learners of skills such as typing or riding a bike, a study says....

    Playing action video games boost motor skills

    Colour red sexually arouses female monkeys

    Colour red sexually arouses female monkeys
    The concept of the colour red being defined as a signal that suggests that a woman is ready to mate is not limited to the human species. The 'red effect' ...

    Colour red sexually arouses female monkeys

    Not Too Sexy To The City: Heel Maker Jimmy Choo's Stock Market Debut Falls Flat

    Not Too Sexy To The City: Heel Maker Jimmy Choo's Stock Market Debut Falls Flat
    Conditional trading began at 140 pence per share, valuing the business at about 546.6 million pounds ($874 million), though the price inched up later. The valuation was at the low end of previous guidance.

    Not Too Sexy To The City: Heel Maker Jimmy Choo's Stock Market Debut Falls Flat

    Cigarette ash can remove arsenic from water

    Cigarette ash can remove arsenic from water
    While the technology for removing arsenic from water exists and is in widespread use in industrialised areas, it is expensive and impractical for rural and developing regions....

    Cigarette ash can remove arsenic from water