There is relatively good evidence that non-human primates can communicate about objects and events in their environment in ways that allow recipients to draw inferences about the nature of the event experienced by the signaller. In some species, there is also evidence that the basic semantic units are not individual calls, but call sequences and the combinations generated by them. These two findings are relevant to theories pertaining to the origins of human language because of the resemblances of these phenomena with linguistic reference and syntactic organisation. Until recently, however, most research efforts on the primate origins of human language have involved Old World species with comparatively few systematic studies on New...
One of the most prominent behavioural features of many forest primates are the loud calls given by t...
International audienceAccording to most current theories, one of the main differences between human ...
International audienceCompared to humans, non-human primates have very little control over their voc...
There is relatively good evidence that non-human primates can communicate about objects and events i...
Black-fronted titi monkeys, Callicebus nigrifrons, produce acoustically distinct vocalizations in r...
Upon encountering predators, many animals produce specific vocalisations that alert others and some...
Animal semantic communication has received considerable theoretical and empirical attention because...
Primate vocal behavior is often considered irrelevant in modeling human language evolution, mainly ...
The alarm calls of nonhuman primates are occasionally cited as functionally equivalent to lexical wo...
It is difficult to overestimate the influence of language in day to day life, and language is often ...
Our research was funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framewor...
Some animal vocalizations have been described as referential, or semantic, because individuals respo...
8th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG 8), Utrecht, NETHERLANDS, APR 14-...
International audienceHuman language has evolved on a biological substrate with phylogenetic roots d...
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under ...
One of the most prominent behavioural features of many forest primates are the loud calls given by t...
International audienceAccording to most current theories, one of the main differences between human ...
International audienceCompared to humans, non-human primates have very little control over their voc...
There is relatively good evidence that non-human primates can communicate about objects and events i...
Black-fronted titi monkeys, Callicebus nigrifrons, produce acoustically distinct vocalizations in r...
Upon encountering predators, many animals produce specific vocalisations that alert others and some...
Animal semantic communication has received considerable theoretical and empirical attention because...
Primate vocal behavior is often considered irrelevant in modeling human language evolution, mainly ...
The alarm calls of nonhuman primates are occasionally cited as functionally equivalent to lexical wo...
It is difficult to overestimate the influence of language in day to day life, and language is often ...
Our research was funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framewor...
Some animal vocalizations have been described as referential, or semantic, because individuals respo...
8th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG 8), Utrecht, NETHERLANDS, APR 14-...
International audienceHuman language has evolved on a biological substrate with phylogenetic roots d...
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under ...
One of the most prominent behavioural features of many forest primates are the loud calls given by t...
International audienceAccording to most current theories, one of the main differences between human ...
International audienceCompared to humans, non-human primates have very little control over their voc...