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Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) intentional communication is not contingent upon food
Authors:Jamie L. Russell  Stephanie Braccini  Nicole Buehler  Michael J. Kachin  Steven J. Schapiro  William D. Hopkins
Affiliation:(1) Division of Psychobiology, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, 954 Gatewood Road, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA;(2) Department of Veterinary Sciences, The University of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Bastrop, TX 78602, USA;(3) Animal Behavior Program, Southwestern University, Georgetown, TX 78626, USA;(4) Division of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA;(5) Department of Psychology, Berry College, Mount Berry, GA 30149, USA
Abstract:Studies of great apes have revealed that they use manual gestures and other signals to communicate about distal objects. There is also evidence that chimpanzees modify the types of communicative signals they use depending on the attentional state of a human communicative partner. The majority of previous studies have involved chimpanzees requesting food items from a human experimenter. Here, these same communicative behaviors are reported in chimpanzees requesting a tool from a human observer. In this study, captive chimpanzees were found to gesture, vocalize, and display more often when the experimenter had a tool than when she did not. It was also found that chimpanzees responded differentially based on the attentional state of a human experimenter, and when given the wrong tool persisted in their communicative efforts. Implications for the referential and intentional nature of chimpanzee communicative signaling are discussed.
Keywords:Tool use  Cognition  Communication  Chimpanzee  Manual gesture
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