Bonobos Exhibit Human-Like Language Structures in Groundbreaking Study
- Bonobos, our closest living relatives, display communication that shares key aspects of human language, as reported by the study published in Science.
- Research shows bonobos' calls can combine to form phrases where one modifies the meaning of another, indicating nontrivial compositionality, according to lead author Mélissa Berthet.
- The study recorded over 700 vocal calls from bonobos and suggests their communication may help us understand language origins in humans, as stated by Simon Townsend.
- Experts agree that the findings are significant, offering insights into the evolutionary origins of communication, as noted by Robert Seyfarth.
20 Articles
20 Articles
Hoots and grunts from bonobos show signs of complex communication, researchers say
The peeps, hoots and grunts of wild bonobos, a species of great ape living in the African rainforest, can convey complex thoughts in a way that mirrors some elements of human language, a new study suggests.
Chimp relatives use humanlike grammar, study finds
Humans are not the only species to combine concepts to build more complex meaning, a new study found. Bonobo chimpanzees combine calls in a manner similar to how humans structure words to make phrases and sentences, according to findings published on Thursday in the journal Science. The pygmy chimpanzees “seem to combine calls to convey meaning that…
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