In the current study two groups of young chimpanzees (4–6 and 8–9 years old) were given a T-bar and a food item that could
only be reached by using the T-bar. Experimental subjects were given the opportunity to observe an adult using the stick as
a tool to obtain the food; control subjects were exposed to the adult but were given no demonstration. Subjects in the older
group did not learn to use the tool. Subjects in the younger group who were exposed to the demonstrator learned to use the
stick as a tool much more readily than those who were not. None of the subjects demonstrated an ability to imitatively copy
the demonstrator's precise behavioral strategies. More than simple stimulus enhancement was involved, however, since both
groups manipulated the T-bar, but only experimental subjects used it in its function as a tool. Our findings complement naturalistic
observations in suggesting that chimpanzee tool-use is in some sense «culturally transmitted» — though perhaps not in the
same sense as social-conventional behaviors for which precise copying of conspecifics is crucial.
Key words Chimpanzees - Observational Learning - Tool-Use