Baboons live in groups in the wild. These groups are called troops. Crofoot wanted to watch a troop make decisions. She followed monkeys in Kenya as they traveled to find food.
Crofoot put a collar on each baboon in the troop. The collars tracked exactly where each baboon moved. Crofoot collected the data on her computer. She noticed an interesting pattern.
Different baboons led the group around. But sometimes two leaders disagreed on where to go. Each leader started walking the way it wanted to travel. Would the troop follow?
The troop needed to stick together. That meant making a group decision. If the two leaders were close together, the troop compromised. They all took a path down the middle. But what if the leaders were farther apart? That’s when the troop had to vote.
To vote, each baboon walked over to the leader it agreed with. The side with the most votes won. The whole troop went that way. Sometimes a side won by only one vote! “There’s a strong majority rule,” says Crofoot.