Chimpanzees have almost the same personality traits as humans, and they are structured almost identically, according to new work led by researchers at Georgia State University. The research also shows some of those traits have a neurobiological basis, and that those traits vary according to the biological sex of the individual chimpanzee.
"Our work also demonstrates the promise of using chimpanzee models to investigate the neurobiology of personality processes," said Assistant Professor Robert Latzman of
Psychology2, who led the research team. "We know that these processes are associated with a variety of emotional health outcomes. We're excited to continue investigating these links."
The team, which also included Professor William Hopkins of Neuroscience, started with a common tool for
analyzing3 chimp1 personalities4 called the Chimpanzee Personality Questionnaire.
The questionnaire is filled out by the chimpanzees' caregivers, who rate individual
chimps5 in 43 categories based on their observation of the animals' daily behavior. Is the chimp excitable?
Impulsive6? Playful? Timid?
Dominant7? The questionnaire records it all.
The researchers
analyzed8 complete questionnaires for 174 chimpanzees housed at the Yerkes National
Primate9 Center at Emory University. They ran extensive individual analyses to find out which traits tend to go together, and which combine to make more basic, fundamental "meta-traits."
The analysis showed that the most fundamental personality trait for chimpanzees is dominance -- that is, whether an animal is a generally dominant and undercontrolled "Alpha," or a more playful and
sociable10 "Beta."
But those two big categories can be broken down
statistically11 into smaller personality traits in ways that echo the personality structures researchers have repeatedly found in child and adult human subjects.
Alpha personalities, for example, statistically break down into tendencies toward dominance and disinhibition(去抑制). Beta personalities, on the other hand, show low dominance and positive emotionality.
Further analysis shows these lower order traits also can be statistically broken down into their
constituent12 parts. The research team identified five personality factors that combine differently in each individual chimpanzee:
conscientiousness13, dominance, extraversion, agreeableness and intellect. This echoes a well-known five-factor model of the human personality, although the specific factors are slightly different.