Chimpanzees produce different grunt calls when finding different food items. |
Chimpanzees have special grunts for particular types of foods, and their
fellow chimps know exactly what those calls mean. Now, by studying what
happened after two separate groups of adult chimpanzees moved in
together at the Edinburgh Zoo, researchers have made the surprising
discovery that our primate cousins can change those referential grunts
over time, to make them sound more like those of new peers.
The findings, reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology
on February 5, suggest that human language isn't as unique as we
thought in its ability to reference external objects with socially
learned symbols.
"Our study shows that chimpanzee referential food calls are not fixed
in their structure and that, when exposed to a new social group,
chimpanzees can change their calls to sound more like their group
mates," says Katie Slocombe of the University of York.
Scientists had generally accepted that the acoustic structure of
chimpanzee calls was fixed, with the differences primarily a matter of
the animals' arousal state. That apparent lack of flexible control over
their referential vocalizations had even been considered a key
discontinuity with human language.
However, Slocombe and her colleagues found that the acoustic
structure of referential food grunts produced by two groups of adult
chimpanzees converged over the course of three years, as its members got
to know each other better. That acoustic convergence had nothing to do
with individual food preferences, either.
The researchers used audio analysis to demonstrate the convergence of structure, but they could also hear the difference.
"We think it's quite easy to hear how the two groups called in
different ways for apples in 2010, and how by 2013 the Dutch individuals
changed their grunts to sound more like Edinburgh individuals," says
Stuart Watson, also from the University of York.
The researchers say that the findings "represent the first evidence
of non-human animals actively modifying and socially learning the
structure of a meaningful referential vocalization" from other members
of their species. Given the relatively short evolutionary distance
between humans and chimpanzees--five to seven million years--it also
suggests that our most recent common ancestor with chimpanzees also
shared this "building block" of language.
"It would be really exciting to try and find out why chimpanzees are
motivated to sound more similar to their group mates," adds Simon
Townsend of the University of Zurich, who was also involved in the
study. "Is it so that they can be better understood? Or is it just to
sound more similar to their friends?"
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