New acoustic analyses of the calls of great apes and humans in response to tickling reveal the probable evolutionary history of laughter in humans and our nearest living relatives, the great apes. -Invited dispatch on Davila Ross, Owren, & Zimmerman (2009
Background: Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human spee...
International audienceIn the last decade, two hypotheses, one on the evolution of animal vocal commu...
International audienceOur research describes the natural communication in different primates, as wel...
SummaryNew acoustic analyses of the calls of great apes and humans in response to tickling reveal th...
SummaryHuman emotional expressions, such as laughter, are argued to have their origins in ancestral ...
In anthropoid primates, social grooming is the principal mechanism (mediated by the central nervous ...
We begin to laugh from a very young age, and for a variety of reasons. But did you know that we ar...
Humans have the ability to replicate the emotional expressions of others even when they undergo diff...
Laughter is a physiological process and a fundamentally social phenomenon with physical, biological,...
Human language is largely a vocal behaviour that has evolved from a more ancient primate communicati...
Speech is a human hallmark. However, its evolution is little understood. It remains largely unknown ...
Laughter is a universally produced vocal signal that plays an important role in human social interac...
Laughter is an affective nonspeech vocalization that is not reserved to humans, but can also be obse...
The ability to flexibly produce facial expressions and vocalizations has a strong impact on the way ...
The evolutionary origins of the use of speech signals to refer to events or objects in the world hav...
Background: Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human spee...
International audienceIn the last decade, two hypotheses, one on the evolution of animal vocal commu...
International audienceOur research describes the natural communication in different primates, as wel...
SummaryNew acoustic analyses of the calls of great apes and humans in response to tickling reveal th...
SummaryHuman emotional expressions, such as laughter, are argued to have their origins in ancestral ...
In anthropoid primates, social grooming is the principal mechanism (mediated by the central nervous ...
We begin to laugh from a very young age, and for a variety of reasons. But did you know that we ar...
Humans have the ability to replicate the emotional expressions of others even when they undergo diff...
Laughter is a physiological process and a fundamentally social phenomenon with physical, biological,...
Human language is largely a vocal behaviour that has evolved from a more ancient primate communicati...
Speech is a human hallmark. However, its evolution is little understood. It remains largely unknown ...
Laughter is a universally produced vocal signal that plays an important role in human social interac...
Laughter is an affective nonspeech vocalization that is not reserved to humans, but can also be obse...
The ability to flexibly produce facial expressions and vocalizations has a strong impact on the way ...
The evolutionary origins of the use of speech signals to refer to events or objects in the world hav...
Background: Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human spee...
International audienceIn the last decade, two hypotheses, one on the evolution of animal vocal commu...
International audienceOur research describes the natural communication in different primates, as wel...