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Chimpanzees combine pant hoots with food calls into larger structures
Abstract: This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (PP00P3_163850) to S.W.T. and the NCCR Evolving Language (Swiss National Science Foundation Agreement #51NF40_180888). ; A growing body of observational and experimental data in nonhuman primates has highlighted the presence of rudimentary call combinations within the vocal communication system of monkeys. Such evidence suggests the ability to combine meaning-bearing units into larger structures, a key feature of language also known as syntax, could have its origins rooted within the primate lineage. However, the evolutionary progression of this trait remains ambiguous as evidence for similar combinations in great apes, our closest-living relatives, is sparse and incomplete. In this study, we aimed to bridge this gap by analysing the combinatorial properties of the pant hoot–food call combination in our closest-living relative, the chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes. To systematically investigate the syntactic-like potential of this structure, we adopted three levels of analysis. First, we applied collocation analyses, methods traditionally used in language sciences, to confirm the combination of pant hoots with food calls was not a random co-occurrence, but instead a consistently produced structure. Second, using acoustic analyses, we confirmed pant hoots and food calls comprising the combination were acoustically indistinguishable from the same calls produced in isolation, indicating the pant hoot–food call combination is composed of individually occurring meaning-bearing units, a key criterion of linguistic syntax. Finally, we investigated the context-specific nature of this structure, demonstrating that the call combination was more likely to be produced when feeding on larger patches and when a high-ranking individual joined the feeding party. Together our results converge to provide support for the systematic combination of calls in chimpanzees. We highlight that playback experiments are vital to robustly disentangle both the function this combination might serve and the similarities with combinations of meaning-bearing units (i.e. syntax) in language. ; Publisher PDF ; Peer reviewed
Keyword: BF; BF Psychology; Call combination; Evolution of language; Great ape; NDAS; Nonhuman primate; Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii; QL; QL Zoology; Syntax
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/23656
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.06.026
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2
Adult learning and language simplification
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3
Communicative eye contact signals a commitment to cooperate for young children
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4
Sound symbolic congruency detection in humans but not in great apes
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5
Acquisition of a socially learned tool use sequence in chimpanzees : implications for cumulative culture
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6
Automated face detection for occurrence and occupancy estimation in chimpanzees
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7
Communication in the second and third year of life : relationships between nonverbal social skills and language
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8
Understanding metacognitive confidence : insights from judgment-of-learning justifications
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9
Proto-consonants were information-dense via identical bioacoustic tags to proto-vowels
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10
Listeners can extract meaning from non-linguistic infant vocalisations cross-culturally
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11
Great apes and children infer causal relations from patterns of variation and covariation
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12
Sensitivity to relational similarity and object similarity in apes and children
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13
Morphologically structured vocalizations in female Diana monkeys
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14
Cross-age effects on forensic face construction
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15
Formal monkey linguistics : the debate
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16
What do monkey calls mean?
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17
A general auditory bias for handling speaker variability in speech? Evidence in humans and songbirds
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18
Identifying partially schematic units in the code-mixing of an English and German speaking child
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19
Formal monkey linguistics
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20
Are apes essentialists? Scope and limits of psychological essentialism in great apes
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