International audienceBackground: Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human speech, mainly due to vast differences in vocal control. The lack of these abilities in non-human primates is especially striking if compared to some marine mammals and bird species, which has generated somewhat of an evolutionary conundrum. What are the biological roots and underlying evolutionary pressures of the human ability to voluntarily control sound production and learn the vocal utterances of others? One hypothesis is that this capacity has evolved gradually in humans from an ancestral stage that resembled the vocal behavior of modern primates. Support for this has come from studies that have documented limited voca...
International audienceThe potentiality to find precursors of human language in nonhuman primates is ...
Non-human primates possess species-specific repertoires of acoustically distinct call types that ca...
In humans, individuals’ social setting determines which and how language is acquired. Social seclusi...
Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human speech, mainly ...
International audienceIt has been historically claimed that call production in nonhuman primates has...
Human language is largely a vocal behaviour that has evolved from a more ancient primate communicati...
WOS:000278248800050International audienceA growing number of studies revealed that, to some extent, ...
8th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG 8), Utrecht, NETHERLANDS, APR 14-...
International audienceWhile most authors believe that it is legitimate to argue in favor of a coevol...
The extent to which nonhuman primate vocalizations are amenable to modification through experience i...
Recent studies on the social life and vocal production, usage and comprehension of nonhuman primate ...
International audienceAnimal vocal communication, as human language, is primarily a social act. It i...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
International audienceAlthough the vocal repertoire of nonhuman primates is strongly constrained by ...
International audienceThe potentiality to find precursors of human language in nonhuman primates is ...
Non-human primates possess species-specific repertoires of acoustically distinct call types that ca...
In humans, individuals’ social setting determines which and how language is acquired. Social seclusi...
Non-human primate communication is thought to be fundamentally different from human speech, mainly ...
International audienceIt has been historically claimed that call production in nonhuman primates has...
Human language is largely a vocal behaviour that has evolved from a more ancient primate communicati...
WOS:000278248800050International audienceA growing number of studies revealed that, to some extent, ...
8th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG 8), Utrecht, NETHERLANDS, APR 14-...
International audienceWhile most authors believe that it is legitimate to argue in favor of a coevol...
The extent to which nonhuman primate vocalizations are amenable to modification through experience i...
Recent studies on the social life and vocal production, usage and comprehension of nonhuman primate ...
International audienceAnimal vocal communication, as human language, is primarily a social act. It i...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
Language is a uniquely human trait, and questions of how and why it evolved have been intriguing sci...
International audienceAlthough the vocal repertoire of nonhuman primates is strongly constrained by ...
International audienceThe potentiality to find precursors of human language in nonhuman primates is ...
Non-human primates possess species-specific repertoires of acoustically distinct call types that ca...
In humans, individuals’ social setting determines which and how language is acquired. Social seclusi...