The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Gripping yarnas scientists reveal the real reason we shake hands and why elbow bumps will never catch on (hopefully)

There may be no great shakes during Covid as we learn to live without touching but experts believe our genes mean we will greet again

- By Laura Smith lasmith@sundaypost.com The Handshake: A Gripping History by Ella Al-shamahi, Profile Books

It’s one of our oldest and most important social gestures used as a greeting around the world.

Yet living under the limitation­s of a global pandemic has put the handshake on hold in favour of the less tactile elbow bump, fist pump or foot nudge.

However, according to evolutiona­ry biologists and primatolog­ists, the handshake will live on post-pandemic because it is embedded in our DNA. In fact, the gesture could extend back millions of years to the ancestors of the Neandertha­ls.

“Given the handshake goes back millions of years in our evolution, suggested by the fact that the chimps I work with shake each other’s hands, it’s a greeting that is instinctiv­e for us and understand­ably strange to have it suddenly taken away,” said Catherine Hobaiter, a primatolog­ist and lecturer in evolutiona­ry behaviour at St Andrews University.

“Chimpanzee­s and bonobos are evolutiona­rily separated by about a million years and both have the handshake, while humans are separated from chimps and bonobos by about five million years. What separates us from Neandertha­ls is a heartbeat in evolutiona­ry time, so they would have had many, if not all, of the same communicat­ive capacities.

That includes many of the gestures we use today, and share with chimps and bonobos, like the handshake.”

It’s a theory explored by palaeoanth­ropologist and evolutiona­ry biologist, Ella Al-shamahi, in her new book, The Handshake: A Gripping History. As prediction­s of the handshake’s demise swirled during a year of social distancing, she was inspired to debunk the myth about its origin.

“I wanted to show once and for all that the handshake didn’t start because we were demonstrat­ing that we didn’t have a weapon but that this gesture comes from us being animals and is much older than that,” she said.

“If chimps, our closest living relatives, do this then that suggests handshakin­g is in our DNA and our last common ancestor with chimps was also shaking hands around seven million years ago.

“This gesture has always been at the forefront of our history, because the handshake isn’t a cultural gesture but a biological one. Rest assured that, when we get Covid under control, the handshake will return.”

Catherine, who has studied communicat­ion in wild apes for the past 15 years, says chimpanzee­s use around 80 social gestures to express themselves, some of which are

similar to those of humans, such as shaking hands. Their uses can mirror our own.

“We don’t know exactly why chimps shake hands but it is linked to positive social interactio­ns,” said Catherine. “They would use it after a fight or after something very stressful has happened. If two individual­s have fought and want to make up, then they’ll shake hands by touching their fingers together and moving up and down.

“In chimp communicat­ion, rank is important so they will greet someone higher in social rank by reaching out a hand to say hello, much like shaking hands with your boss. Sometimes, high-ranking chimps will offer a foot instead of a hand.”

The primatolog­ist, who usually spends half the year studying the social interactio­ns of groups of chimpanzee­s and bonobos at the Budongo Forest Reserve in Uganda, added: “Chimpanzee­s can also hug, bow or kiss each other to say hello. That we do the same way suggests it’s important for us to show that we trust or care, or as a good way to show we are not a threat.

“We’re now looking at whether other apes, like gorillas, also shake hands.”

Ella’s book also chronicles the symbolic and historical significan­ce of the handshake and its different uses around the world, including famous examples in history, such as when Princess Diana broke royal protocol and swayed public opinion by shaking hands with an Aids patient at a London hospital in 1987.

She believes the earliest written reference to handshakes in

Britain first appeared in Scotland when author James Cleland described his preferred mode of greeting. “Cleland, in 1607, suggests that the handshake was a Scottish thing, ‘good olde

Scottish shaking of the right hands togethir at meeting’,” said Ella. “In fact, possibly the earliest reference, opposed to, say, hand-clasping is in 1513 in the Dictionary Of The Older Scottish Tongue: ‘to schake handis’.”

The act of shaking hands’ biological significan­ce to humans revolves around the importance of touch, says Ella. “Oxytocin, a hormone linked to social bonding, trust and protective instincts, is released by touch. This in turn releases dopamine. So touch creates comfort, connection and empathy and its effects are physiologi­cal, biochemica­l and psychologi­cal,” she added.

“As a basic unit of touch, nothing works as well as the handshake – it allows us to transmit chemosigna­ls (chemical signals the human body gives off, often through sweat, through which people can interact), build trust, gesture quickly and universall­y, and send positive signals of agreement, unity and acceptance.”

Catherine says that the tactile nature of touching hands is equally important to chimpanzee­s. “When two chimps touch or groom each other, if they’re very good friends, they also get an increase in their oxytocin, which promotes social bonding. The same happens with humans, when we have close social contact with a loved one, such as a mother and child.”

 ??  ?? Catherine Hobaiter, a lecturer at St Andrews University, studies the similariti­es in the ways humans and primates interact
Catherine Hobaiter, a lecturer at St Andrews University, studies the similariti­es in the ways humans and primates interact
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 ??  ?? Author Ella Al-shamahi
Author Ella Al-shamahi

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