People playing an online game correctly identified more than half of common great ape gestures
From: PLOS
January 24, 2023 -- Humans
retain an understanding of gestures made by other great apes, even though we no
longer use them ourselves, according to a study by Kirsty E. Graham and
Catherine Hobaiter at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, publishing
January 24thin the open access journal PLOS Biology.
The discovery of
gestures used by great apes provided the first evidence of intentional
communication outside human language, and over 80 such signals have now been
identified. Many of these gestures are shared across non-human apes, including
distantly related apes such as chimpanzees and orangutans. However, despite
humans being more closely related to chimpanzees and bonobos, these ape
gestures are no longer thought to be present in human communication.
Researchers tested
people's understanding of the 10 most common gestures used by chimpanzees (Pan
troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus) using an online game. Over
5,500 participants were asked to view 20 short videos of ape gestures and
select the meaning of the gesture from four possible answers. They found that
participants performed significantly better than expected by chance, correctly
interpreting the meaning of chimpanzee and bonobo gestures over 50% of the
time. Providing participants with contextual information about what the apes in
the video were doing only marginally increased their success rate in
interpreting the meaning of the gesture.
Video playback
experiments have traditionally been used to test language comprehension in
non-human primates, but this study reversed the paradigm to assess humans'
abilities to understand the gestures of their closest living relatives for the
first time. The results suggest that although we no longer use these gestures,
we may have retained an understanding of this ancestral communication system.
The authors say that it remains unclear whether our ability to understand
specific great ape gestures is inherited, or whether humans and other great
apes share an ability to interpret meaningful signals because of their general
intelligence, physical resemblance, and similar social goals.
Graham adds, "All
great apes use gestures, but humans are so gestural -- using gestures while we
speak and sign, learning new gestures, pantomiming etc. -- that it's really hard
to pick out shared great ape gestures just by observing people. By showing
participants videos of common great ape gestures instead, we found that people
can understand these gestures, suggesting that they may form part of an
evolutionarily ancient, shared gesture vocabulary across all great ape species
including us."
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