Chimpanzee gestural exchanges share temporal structure with human language

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Badihi, Gal; Graham, Kirsty E.; Grund, Charlotte; Safryghin, Alexandra; Soldati, Adrian; Donnellan, Ed; Hashimoto, Chie; Mine, Joseph G.; Piel, Alex K.; Stewart, Fiona; Slocombe, Katie E.; Wilke, Claudia; Townsend, Simon W.; Zuberbühler, Klaus; Zulberti, Chiara; Hobaiter, Catherine
Year of Publication: 2024
Journal: Current Biology
Volume: 34
Issue: 14
Pagination: R673 - R674
Date Published: 2024/07/22
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 0960-9822
Abstract:

Humans regularly engage in efficient communicative conversations, which serve to socially align individuals1. In conversations, we take fast-paced turns using a human-universal structure of deploying and receiving signals which shows consistent timing across cultures2. We report here that chimpanzees also engage in rapid signal-to-signal turn-taking during face-to-face gestural exchanges with a similar average latency between turns to that of human conversation. This correspondence between human and chimpanzee face-to-face communication points to shared underlying rules in communication. These structures could be derived from shared ancestral mechanisms or convergent strategies that enhance coordinated interactions or manage competition for communicative ?space?.Humans regularly engage in efficient communicative conversations, which serve to socially align individuals1. In conversations, we take fast-paced turns using a human-universal structure of deploying and receiving signals which shows consistent timing across cultures2. We report here that chimpanzees also engage in rapid signal-to-signal turn-taking during face-to-face gestural exchanges with a similar average latency between turns to that of human conversation. This correspondence between human and chimpanzee face-to-face communication points to shared underlying rules in communication. These structures could be derived from shared ancestral mechanisms or convergent strategies that enhance coordinated interactions or manage competition for communicative ?space?.

Notes:

doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.06.009

DOI: https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(24)00761-9
Export:
Related MOCA Topics: