Friday, August 10, 2012

Is Your Daughter a Chimp?

Imagine your child as a chimpanzee. Don't pretend as though this is a big stretch, especially if they're jumping on the couch cushions and development funny noises, as mine are at the moment. As furry limited apes, do you suppose they'd still be drawn to the same toys-girls to dolls and housekeeping sets, boys to ninja weapons? Or would they, free from all of our cultural conditioning and television commercials, show no gender preference?

It's a long standing moot in child development: Are sex differences in play something biological or something we originate in children straight through public conditioning? For all of the back and forth debating this question has garnered, it's been largely impossible to answer, because you can't cut off children from culture. As it turns out, child psychologists should have just asked a chimpanzee.

Kid Barbie Dolls

A new study, published in the December 21, 2010 issue of the journal Current Biology(see Reference), shows that chimpanzees deep in the Ugandan forest display gender stereotyped play without other chimps modeling this behavior. Based on more than 14 years of fieldwork with the Kanyawara chimp society in Kibale National Park, primitologists Sonya Kahlenberg and Richard Wrangham authored the study, which provides the first evidence of a wild, nonhuman animal exhibiting sex differences in play. Their explore provides strong evidence that such gender-typed play is a natural component of human children as well.

Young chimpanzees in the wild may not have Barbie dolls or Ninja Turtle swords to play with, but they do have sticks-the toy of occasion for all chimp kids. So primitologists tracked the way the youngsters used them. limited girl chimps collected sticks that they used as dolls-cradling their stick, feeding it with other sticks, and ordinarily arresting in "play mothering" in the same way a human girl might play house or take care of a doll. Since they could find no evidence that childbearing females or other adults modeled this stick play to young female chimps, they were able to quit that this tendency arose naturally in the young primates.

Boy chimps, on occasion, would use sticks to mimic child care just like the girls. But far more often they used the sticks to fight with (sound familiar?); something the girls rarely did. Furthermore, when one group of chimps was given a selection of human toys, males tended to migrate towards the trucks and boy toys, while females took interest in the dolls. As Elizabeth Lonsdorf of the Lester E. Fisher town for the Study and Conservation of Apes tells Science News: "These new data advise that sex differences in how children play may go way back in our evolutionary lineage and predate socialization in human cultures."

This does not let caretakers nor culture completely off the hook for gender socialization, however. Studies which demonstrate that adults interact differently with male and female children remain as valid as ever. If you dress the same baby up in either boy or girl clothing, adults treat the child differently depending on what gender they suspect the baby to be. Decades of explore has shown that public conditioning-from the way adults treat children to what they model and what is modeled by the media-exerts a strong influence on children's behavior. Nature versus bring up is not an either/or proposition, but a two-way street, where each one influences the other.

Parents and teachers should continue to try and battle sex stereotypes whenever possible, particularly wherein it pertains to a child who desires to transcend those boundaries. (Girls can be firefighters too if they want to, and there's nothing wrong with a boy who likes to cook.) Just don't expect girls to lose interest in frilly stuff and boys to drop their lizards and snails and take up a sudden interest in ballet. There is a genetic component to stereotypical gender play, and children may naturally be doing what comes naturally to them.

Reference:
1. Bruce Bower, "Female chimps play with dolls," Science News, Vol. 179j No.2, 16, Jan. 15, 2011

Is Your Daughter a Chimp?

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