Volume 114, April 2016, Pages 69–79
- a Callitrichid Research Center, University of Nebraska Omaha, Omaha, NE, U.S.A.
- b Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska Omaha, Omaha, NE, U.S.A.
- c Department of Biology, University of Nebraska Omaha, Omaha, NE, U.S.A.
- Received 9 November 2015, Revised 8 December 2015, Accepted 4 January 2016, Available online 19 February 2016

- MS. number: A15-00957
Highlights
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- We tested whether social familiarity and oxytocin (OXT) influence inequity aversion in marmosets.
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- Marmosets showed inequity aversion that was context specific and sex specific.
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- Inequity aversion was only present between males and their pair-bonded partners.
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- OXT treatment did not influence responses to inequity in marmosets.
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- Inequity aversion is important for maintaining specific cooperative relationships.
Cooperation
among individuals depends, in large part, on a sense of fairness. Many
cooperating nonhuman primates show inequity aversion (i.e. negative
responses to unequal outcomes), and these responses towards inequity
probably evolved as a means to preserve the advantages of cooperative
relationships. However, marmosets (Callithrix spp.) tend to
show little or no inequity aversion, despite the high occurrence of
prosociality and cooperative breeding in callitrichid monkeys. Oxytocin
(OXT) has been implicated in a wide variety of social processes, but
little is known about whether OXT modulates inequity aversion towards
others. We used a tray-pulling task to evaluate whether marmosets would
donate superior rewards to their long-term pair mate or an opposite-sex
stranger following OXT, OXT antagonist and saline treatments. We found
that marmosets show inequity aversion, and that this inequity aversion
is socially and sex specific. Male marmosets showed inequity aversion
towards their pair mates but not towards strangers, and female marmosets
did not show inequity aversion. OXT treatments did not significantly
influence inequity aversion in marmosets. While OXT may modulate
prosocial preferences, the motivations underlying cooperative
relationships, such as inequity aversion, are multifaceted. More
research is needed to evaluate the evolutionary origins, biological
processes and social contexts that influence complex phenotypes like
inequity aversion. Inequity aversion can differ within species in
important and distinct ways, including between individuals who do and do
not share a cooperative relationship. Overall, these findings support
the view that inequity aversion is an important behavioural strategy for
the maintenance of cooperative relationships.
Keywords
- Callithrix;
- cooperation;
- fairness;
- inequity aversion;
- marmoset monkey;
- oxytocin;
- pair bond;
- pro8 oxytocin;
- prosocial choice task;
- sex difference
Copyright © 2016 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.