Monkeys like to mix it up
DUKE (US)—Given a choice between spending a token to get their absolute favorite food or spending it to have a choice from a buffet of options, capuchin monkeys will opt for variety.
In fact, they’ll even eat a less-preferred food from that buffet when the favorite food is on it. They choose variety for variety’s sake.
The choices made by these captive-bred monkeys in an Italian research facility seem to show some innate desire to seek variety, says Dan Ariely, the James B. Duke Professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University.
In a series of experiments Ariely conducted with colleagues at the Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione in Rome, the eight monkeys first had to be taught that the abstract tokens, such as poker chips, plastic cylinders and metal nuts, represented different kinds of choice. With training, the tokens were associated with being able to buy one piece of the most-preferred food, or being able to buy one piece from an assortment of foods that included the most-preferred food.
Lead author Elsa Addessi has used this token method before with this troop of capuchins, who are on public display as well as being used in non-invasive cognitive experiments.
“Economically, the tokens should be equivalent, because they both give you the food you like,” Ariely says.
But once they had the hang of it, the monkeys as a group chose to use the variety tokens and not the “single-food-tokens.” Moreover, once they chose the variety tokens the monkeys also didn’t always take the most-preferred food when it was offered as part of the variety assortment. What this means is that they prefer variety for variety’s sake and are willing to eat food they like less to satisfy their desire for variety.
The work appears online in Behavioural Processes.
The implications of this simple experiment shed some light on consumer behavior, Ariely says. Earlier work on variety-seeking has found that people eat 43 percent more M&M candies when there are 10 colors in the bowl instead of just seven.
“People choose variety for variety’s sake,” Ariely says. “They often choose things they don’t even like as well just for the variety. We knew about this, so the interesting thing was to figure out how basic it is.”
The behavior of the capuchins, which are native to South America, “suggest that there’s some inherent basic strategy for variety,” Ariely explains. In the wild, variety seeking may help ensure a nutritionally varied diet. It is also possible, the authors suggest, that variety-seeking contributed to the rise of bartering and then abstract money in human society.
At the same time, Ariely is somewhat puzzled that humans can get stuck in a rut and not seek more variety. “Ask yourself: How many new things have you tried lately? Have you tried every cereal in the cereal aisle?” It may be that you’re enjoying a daily bowl of a cereal that you would rate as an 8, when just a few feet away on the shelf there is a cereal you’d rate as a 9, but you’ve never tried it.
Businesses can push variety on customers with assortment packs, Ariely suggests, and vicarious experiences like the Food Network can encourage exploration as well.
“How do we get ourselves to explore? Even monkeys do it—so maybe we should also try more variety.”
The research was supported by the Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione and Duke.


The Honest Truth About Dishonesty: How We Lie to Everyone - Especially Ourselves

Have you seen this TED talk?:
Susan Savage-Rumbaugh on apes
http://www.ted.com/talks/susan_savage_rumbaugh_on_apes_that_write.html
People tell me to try new foods all the time. I’m from a place where people don’t eat lots of Asian food and I’m extremely picky and closed-minded.
But from time to time I do try some Asian food all my friends (many Asian) insist I try. I expect to hate it and always do: I mostly score them 5, and often 1 on a scale of 1 to 10. And each time I’m sacrificng a good 8 quality meal.
Shouldn’t we take into account the opportunity cost of trying new thinks? If I eat 25 new cereals that average a 3 then I lost 25*(8-3)=125 hedons and I would have to eat the new 9 cereal every day for 4 months to catch up. But I wouldn’t do that because I’m trying to find new things I like all the time. I’m not sure what the optimum level of experimenting is, most people are probably below it but I think it’s possble to be above it.
Why don’t people choose more variety? I think it sometimes relieves have to make one more decision in days that are already filled with having to make choices. I have a gym in my basement and could do so many different exercises but I fall into the routine of essentially doing the same ones. If I can avoid thinking at 5am I’ll do it.
How does this tie into the “Paradox of Choice,” is it simply overrated and unsubstantiated?
http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2009/11/the-paradox-of-choice-is-not-robust.html
Hi Steve:
Personally, I do take into account the opportunity cost of trying something new (especially with food, since I have been more selective about where my calories come from and if they are worth the pleasure
. But I also take into account, as said by Dan Ariely in the book, the “pleasure” and “displeasure” associated with the experiment.
If the pleasure weighs more than the displeasure which includes the opportunity cost, I go for it. For example, I enjoy trying a new dishes at a restaurant. Even if I don’t like it, just the fact that I tried something new, makes me happy. Of course, there are days when I stick to what I know for sure. I have also found out, after trying a lot of Asian food, that I do not prefer it as much. Now I do not try anything new in Asian cooking, unless someone specially recommends that to me. So far, for the most part, such recommendations have worked.
But such an approach works with me more in case of leisure activities such as food, exercise, travelling than work related activities. For example, I have certain ways of doing things that have proven to be productive. If a friend comes to me and asks me to try something new that they feel may work better, usually I am still reluctant to experiment, because perceived displeasure goes up not just due to the opportunity cost, but also because the possible loss of productivity is visible, measurable. Although, the suggested way really can work better, displeasure weighs higher than pleasure. On the other hand, if I realize myself that I can improve this process, I am more willing to take that risk because of the feeling that ‘it is worth a try’ which adds to the net worth of “pleasure – displeasure”.
That is how I decide my optimum level of experimenting. I believe:
1. The level is different for everyone.
2. Even for the same person, it can vary from time to time, and in different situations.
3. We are capable of making conscious effort to increase or decrease that level if we want it changed.
What do you think?
Manasi,
I agree, although I am alot more openminded and don’t see different as a bad thing but as a really good thing that makes me wrong.
I’d hate my life to be lead by assumptions that I am always right because I am not. I’d hate to walk through life always searching for what I consider to be ‘good,great or perfect’
If I’d done that? I wouldn’t be here. Where I am at. I’d be stuck.
Stuck in preconceived notions and ideas.
When I studied economics we used vareity as a key to understand consumer behaviour. It was a fundamental part of the demand curve.
When I studied economics we used vareity as a key to understand consumer behaviour. It was a fundamental part of the demand curve.
It was actaully one part of economics that made sense in reality!
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