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Just like us, monkeys may feel pressure to perform

Just like people, some monkeys can choke under the pressure to perform, a new study shows.
A monkey looks into the distance with what looks like an expression of determination

Being stressed about doing well on a test might not be limited to humans, according to a new study.

The study, which involved tufted capuchin monkeys living in groups, is the first to specifically explore whether other species experience pressure to perform, the researchers say.

The researchers gave the monkeys a computerized matching task. Some trials were cued to be harder, with a higher possible reward and a timeout consequence for wrong answers, while other trials were typical in difficulty to their usual computer tasks.

The team found significant variation in how individual monkeys responded to these trials when researchers removed the difference in difficulty, suggesting that for some monkeys the cues of high stakes were enough to affect performance.

“There are several different explanations for why humans might ‘choke’ or ‘thrive’ under pressure, but all of these explanations have traditionally considered this sensitivity to pressure to be a human-specific trait,” says lead author Meg Sosnowski, a PhD candidate at Georgia State.

“Our new results provide the first evidence that other species also might be susceptible to this influence of pressure, and that our responses to that pressure are, in part, the result of individual variation in an evolutionarily common stress response.”

The researchers also found that higher levels of a naturally occurring biomarker of stress, cortisol, were related to the monkeys’ performance. Higher levels of cortisol were associated with a lower ability to successfully complete the high-pressure trials, providing evidence that an individual’s long-term stress state might be related to cognitive performance.

“This opens the door not just to explore how responses to pressure might have impacted the evolution of cognition, but also provides clues pointing us to potential avenues that might mitigate performance deficits, both in humans and in other species,” Sosnowski says.

The paper appears in Scientific Reports. Additional coauthors are from Emory University and Georgia State.

Source: Georgia State University

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