The Hamilton Spectator

Humans can understand ape ‘language’: study

It could be possible that a shared lexicon is inherited biological­ly from a common ancestor

- BRENDAN RASCIUS

It turns out you don’t have to be Jane Goodall to understand apes.

Even untrained humans can decipher ape communicat­ion, including gestures related to grooming and sex, according to a new study published this week in the journal PLOS Biology.

The findings suggest humans may be able to tap into shared ancestral knowledge preserved long after our evolutiona­ry split from apes, researcher­s said.

As part of the study, 5,656 participan­ts were asked to watch a series of 20 videos displaying gestures from chimpanzee­s and bonobos, our closest living ancestors.

Only common gestures with confirmed meanings were shown in the experiment.

Some participan­ts, in addition to the videos, were also provided a one-line descriptio­n of each gesture for context.

Afterward, participan­ts chose the meaning they thought best matched each gesture from a multiple-choice list.

Among some of the gestures presented in the videos were the “Big Loud Scratch,” which means an animal wants to be groomed, and the “Object Shake,” which signals a desire to have sex, researcher­s said in Tuesday’s study.

Participan­ts accurately interprete­d the meaning of the gestures at a rate “significan­tly higher than expected by chance,” researcher­s said.

“Overall they had 52 per cent accuracy when they just saw the gesture action, and 57 per cent when they were told what happened before the gesture,” Dr. Kirsty Graham, a co-author of the study, told McClatchy News. “If they were randomly clicking we’d expect about 25 per cent accuracy.”

As to why untrained humans can decode ape signals, researcher­s are not sure, though they have ventured several guesses.

It’s possible apes and humans just happen to share the ability to interpret meaningful signals due to general intelligen­ce and other visual clues, researcher­s said. After all, some gestures resemble the actions that they want to happen.

It’s also possible that the shared lexicon is inherited biological­ly from a common ancestor, illustrati­ng “deep evolutiona­ry continuity between” human and ape communicat­ion, researcher­s said.

“The main takeaway is that we now have a clearer idea where humans fit into the great ape gesture picture,” Graham said. “It seems to be a shared communicat­ion system across great apes and one that was likely used by our last common ancestors.”

Though researcher­s disagree about the exact timetable, recent studies indicate human ancestors diverged from those of chimpanzee­s and bonobos about 8 million years ago.

If you want to take a try at recognizin­g ape gestures, the test can be taken online at app.gorilla.sc/openmateri­als/344409.

‘‘ The main takeaway is that we now have a clearer idea where humans fit into the great ape gesture picture.

DR. KIRSTY GRAHAM STUDY CO-AUTHOR

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