Since this skill also entails forethought involving self-control and mental time travel, the findings point to a complex "inner mental world" possessed by apes, including gorillas, which were studied in trials before the official research began.
"When humans shut their eyes, a new vivid world takes hold," co-author Mathias Osvath told Discovery News.
"This mental world with its first-person perspective has been suggested to be unique to humans," added Osvath of Lunds University Cognitive Science in Sweden. "It is arguably impossible to plan like the apes do without having an inner world of some sort. (Our results) strongly imply a consciousness that many think is restricted to the human domain."
For the study, published in Animal Cognition, he and colleague Helena Osvath first showed two female chimps, Linda and Maria Magdalena, along with a male orangutan named Naong, how to sip a yummy fruit soup using a straw-like hose.
The researchers next presented their furry test subjects with a favorite fruit -- a grape -- and the hose, which the animals could save and use to sip soup later. The apes exercised self-control by foregoing the immediate grape reward. They instead chose the hose and patiently waited for the bigger food payoff.
To control for associative learning, a process whereby someone just blindly links one thing to another, the researchers again offered fruit to the apes, as well as one functional tool and three non-functional ones.
The scientists also conducted a similar test, where they again presented the sippy hose, but tried to distract the animals with a blue plastic car, a small teddy bear, a colorful screwdriver handle, a brown bootlace, a yellow plastic toy spade, a picture of a banana, and other items potentially coveted by apes.
The chimps and the orangutan aced the tests, choosing the hose 11 out of 12 trials. In fact, one of the few glitches during the entire study occurred when Linda's playing infant grabbed the hose and hid it.
"In our study, we show that the value of the hose is not intrinsic, meaning it is not worth anything in itself, as it would have if it were associatively learned," said Osvath.
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