2026-02-05 ジョンズ・ホプキンス大学(JHU)
<関連情報>
- https://hub.jhu.edu/2026/02/05/apes-share-human-ability-to-imagine/
- https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz0743
言語訓練を受けたボノボ、カンジによる擬似物体の表現の証拠 Evidence for representation of pretend objects by Kanzi, a language-trained bonobo
Amalia P. M. Bastos and Christopher Krupenye
Science Published:5 Feb 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adz0743

Editor’s summary
Classic childhood activities like tea parties and sword fights with sticks demonstrate the human ability to generate secondary representations, conditions we know aren’t “real” but that we nonetheless engage with. Whether nonhuman animals are capable of these types of representations has been difficult to test. Bastos and Krupenye studied a language-trained bonobo, Kanzi, to see whether he could understand and engage with pretend conditions. Across three different experiments, Kanzi was able to identify pretend objects, demonstrating that he could create a secondary representation and showing that humans are not alone in this ability. —Sacha Vignieri
Abstract
Secondary representations enable our minds to depart from the here-and-now and generate imaginary, hypothetical, or alternate possibilities that are decoupled from reality, supporting many of our richest cognitive capacities such as mental-state attribution, simulation of possible futures, and pretense. We present experimental evidence that a nonhuman primate can represent pretend objects. Kanzi, a lexigram-trained bonobo, correctly identified the location of pretend objects (e.g., “juice” poured between empty containers), in response to verbal prompts in scaffolded pretense interactions. Across three experiments, we conceptually replicated this finding and excluded key alternative explanations. Our findings suggest that the capacity to form secondary representations of pretend objects is within the cognitive potential of, at least, an enculturated ape and likely dates back 6 to 9 million years, to our common evolutionary ancestors.

