Comparative field data suggest the timing and intensity of parental care strongly shifts when juvenile animals show peak physical risk‑taking: chimpanzees exhibit high 'free‑flight' risk in infancy whereas humans push risky peak later, implying prolonged caregiving in humans delays dangerous physical exploration. This hypothesis links life‑history (parental investment) to developmental timing of thrill‑seeking and can be tested with cross‑species longitudinal datasets and variation in human parenting regimes.
— If true, it reframes debates about youth risk (sports, road safety, schooling, juvenile justice and parenting policy) by treating adolescent thrill‑seeking as an evolved, malleable outcome of caregiving practices rather than merely a cultural or pathological problem.
Molly Glick
2026.01.07
100% relevant
iScience paper using 119 wild chimpanzees at Kibale National Park measuring 'free flight' behaviours (falls, letting go between branches) and age classes (infant/juvenile/adolescent), showing infants take risks earlier than human children.
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