Chimps, Humans and Macaques All Have a Drive to ‘People Watch’
NEWS | 07 October 2025
The human fascination with watching others—whether through reality TV, Instagram stories or overheard drama—is often dismissed as nosiness. But new research suggests this impulse may be a social survival tool dating back millions of years. To explore the origins of social curiosity, Laura Lewis, a comparative and developmental psychologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and her colleagues studied how human children between four and six years old from San Francisco’s Bay Area and adult chimpanzees responded to certain videos showing members of their respective species. The results, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, show that both groups preferred watching social interactions over scenes involving solitary individuals—even forgoing small rewards to see the former. “These findings demonstrate that social information is important, rewarding and valuable for humans and other primate species,” Lewis says. “It suggests that social information was also important for our shared primate ancestors who lived somewhere between five million and eight million years ago and that for millions of years it has been adaptive for primates to gain social information about those around them.”* On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Among the children (but not the chimps), the researchers noticed another pattern: as they grew older, boys became increasingly interested in watching scenes of social conflict, such as a tug-of-war over toys or one child crying while another yelled, whereas girls developed a stronger preference for positive interactions, such as play or hair grooming. The researchers hypothesize this result could reflect differing socialization patterns and evolutionary pressures particular to humans. Another recent study, published in Animal Cognition, explored peer-watching behavior in long-tailed macaques. Both female and male macaques showed more interest in aggressive interactions than in peaceful grooming, and both paid more attention to videos of familiar individuals. The study’s lead author, Liesbeth Sterck, a primatologist at Utrecht University in the Netherlands, says the latter behavior mirrors the way humans are drawn to the social lives of people they recognize—whether family, friends or movie stars. Interest in aggressive interactions, which are likely to reveal shifts in dominance or signal potential threats, echoes findings that humans are especially attuned to watching conflict in media. “Keeping track of the power balance in your own group likely has prime value for primates, including humans,” Sterck says. Gillian Forrester, who studies comparative cognition at the University of Sussex in England and was not involved in either study, says social attention is key to maintaining a good reputation. In ancient humans and other primates, reputational damage can bar access to food and mates, incite physical confrontations and, in extreme cases, lead to potentially fatal ostracism. With so much at stake, primates evolved to keep a close eye on group members. “Modern humans retain this keen attention to other people’s social interactions as an evolutionary adaptation,” Forrester says—so people watching might just pay off. *Editor’s Note: This sentence was edited after posting to correct Laura Lewis’s comment about the time frame of humans’ and chimpanzees’ shared ancestor.
Author: Sarah Lewin Frasier. Clarissa Brincat.
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