We describe the repertoire of learned vocal and breathing-related behaviors (VBBs) performed by the enculturated gorilla Koko. We examined a large video corpus of Koko and observed 439 VBBs spread across 161 bouts. Our analysis shows that Koko exercises voluntary control over the performance of nine distinctive VBBs, which involve variable coordination of her breathing, larynx, and supralaryngeal articulators like the tongue and lips. Each of these behaviors is performed in the context of particular manual action routines and gestures. Based on these and other findings, we suggest that vocal learning and the ability to exercise volitional control over vocalization, particularly in a multimodal context, might have figured relatively early in...
How did human language evolve from earlier forms of primate communication? One key transition has be...
As a prerequisite for human speech vocal communication has been intensively investigated in various ...
The presence of divergent and independent research traditions in the gestural and vocal domains of p...
“Gesture-first” theories dismiss ancestral great apes’ vocalization as a substrate for language evol...
Breath control is critical to the production of spoken language and commonly postulated as a unique ...
Breath control is critical to the production of spoken language and common-ly postulated as a unique...
Gesture-first theories of language origins often raise two unsubstantiated arguments against vocal o...
Vocal fold control was critical to the evolution of spoken language, much as it today allows us to l...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
One of the most apparent discontinuities between non-human primate (primate) call communication and ...
The capacity of nonhuman primates to actively modify the acoustic structure of existing sounds or vo...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
How did human language evolve from earlier forms of primate communication? One key transition has be...
As a prerequisite for human speech vocal communication has been intensively investigated in various ...
The presence of divergent and independent research traditions in the gestural and vocal domains of p...
“Gesture-first” theories dismiss ancestral great apes’ vocalization as a substrate for language evol...
Breath control is critical to the production of spoken language and commonly postulated as a unique ...
Breath control is critical to the production of spoken language and common-ly postulated as a unique...
Gesture-first theories of language origins often raise two unsubstantiated arguments against vocal o...
Vocal fold control was critical to the evolution of spoken language, much as it today allows us to l...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
One of the most apparent discontinuities between non-human primate (primate) call communication and ...
The capacity of nonhuman primates to actively modify the acoustic structure of existing sounds or vo...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
How did human language evolve from earlier forms of primate communication? One key transition has be...
As a prerequisite for human speech vocal communication has been intensively investigated in various ...
The presence of divergent and independent research traditions in the gestural and vocal domains of p...