Publications by authors named "Klaus Zuberbuhler"

Strontium isotope (Sr/Sr) analysis with reference to strontium isotope landscapes (Sr isoscapes) allows reconstructing mobility and migration in archaeology, ecology, and forensics. However, despite the vast potential of research involving Sr/Sr analysis particularly in Africa, Sr isoscapes remain unavailable for the largest parts of the continent. Here, we measure the Sr/Sr ratios in 778 environmental samples from 24 African countries and combine this data with published data to model a bioavailable Sr isoscape for sub-Saharan Africa using random forest regression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wild chimpanzees drum on tree buttresses during dominance displays and travel, generating low-frequency sounds that are audible over distances of more than 1 km. Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in the Nimba Mountains of Guinea selectively choose trees and buttresses when drumming, potentially based on their resonant properties, suggesting that these chimpanzees are optimizing their drumming signals. We investigated whether male eastern chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) from the Waibira community in the Budongo Forest, Uganda, also show preferences in tree and buttress choice, exploring whether selectivity is a species-wide feature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Accumulating evidence indicates that some ape species produce more alarm behaviors to potential dangers when in the presence of uninformed conspecifics. However, since previous studies presented naturalistic stimuli, the influence of prior experience could not be controlled for.

Method: To examine this, we investigated whether apes (wild chimpanzees of the Budongo Forest, Uganda) would communicate differently about a novel danger (an unusually large spider) depending on whether they were with an uniformed conspecific.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human language relies on a rich cognitive machinery, partially shared with other animals. One key mechanism, however, decomposing events into causally linked agent-patient roles, has remained elusive with no known animal equivalent. In humans, agent-patient relations in event cognition drive how languages are processed neurally and expressions structured syntactically.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Complex vocal systems are thought to evolve if individuals are regularly challenged by complex social decision-making, the social complexity hypothesis. We tested this idea on a West African forest non-human primate, the Olive colobus monkey, a highly cryptic species with very little social behavior and very small group sizes, factors unlikely to favor the evolution of complex communication. The species also has an unusual fission-fusion social system, with group members regularly spending considerable amounts of time with neighboring groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ability to coordinate actions is of vital importance for group-living animals, particularly in relation to travel. Groups can only remain cohesive if members possess a cooperative mechanism to overcome differences in individual priorities and social power when coordinating departures. To better understand how hominids achieve spatio-temporally coordinated group movements, we investigated vocally initiated group departures in three habituated groups of western gorillas () in the Central African Republic.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Non-human primates, like putty-nosed monkeys, struggle to modify their calls but can create variable sequences of calls to convey information effectively.
  • Researchers studied two populations of putty-nosed monkeys to see how they respond to threats like leopards and crowned eagles, finding distinct differences in call assembly.
  • The findings suggest that while these primates have basic call types similar across regions, their control over the order of these calls can vary, offering insights into animal communication and potential implications for linguistic theories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Language is shaped by both genetic factors and changes in culture over time, making it unique and complex.
  • Studying how languages evolve helps us understand not just language but also how cultures and biology change together.
  • Recognizing the differences in how languages and other things evolve can help scientists address important challenges, like language disorders and the effects of technology on communication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Humans regularly engage in efficient communicative conversations, which serve to socially align individuals. In conversations, we take fast-paced turns using a human-universal structure of deploying and receiving signals which shows consistent timing across cultures. We report here that chimpanzees also engage in rapid signal-to-signal turn-taking during face-to-face gestural exchanges with a similar average latency between turns to that of human conversation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Wild chimpanzees in Uganda's Budongo Forest consume a wide range of plants, some of which may offer medicinal benefits despite being nutritionally poor or toxic.
  • The study examined 17 plant samples linked to self-medication behaviors in chimpanzees, finding that many extracts showed significant antibacterial and anti-inflammatory properties in lab tests.
  • Specifically, the strongest antibacterial effects were noted in extracts from Alstonia boonei and Khaya anthotheca, indicating that these chimpanzees may use these plants to combat infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When conversing, humans instantaneously predict meaning from fragmentary and ambiguous mspeech, long before utterance completion. They do this by integrating priors (initial assumptions about the world) with contextual evidence to rapidly decide on the most likely meaning. One powerful prior is attentional preference for agents, which biases sentence processing but universally so only if agents are animate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Proposed mechanisms of zoonotic virus spillover often posit that wildlife transmission and amplification precede human outbreaks. Between 2006 and 2012, the palm Raphia farinifera, a rich source of dietary minerals for wildlife, was nearly extirpated from Budongo Forest, Uganda. Since then, chimpanzees, black-and-white colobus, and red duiker were observed feeding on bat guano, a behavior not previously observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parsing signals from noise is a general problem for signallers and recipients, and for researchers studying communicative systems. Substantial efforts have been invested in comparing how other species encode information and meaning, and how signalling is structured. However, research depends on identifying and discriminating signals that represent meaningful units of analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Identifying medicinal resources in chimpanzee diets is challenging due to the need for detailed behavioral data and costly pharmacological analyses, often overlooking combinations of resources that may enhance treatment effectiveness.
  • The study introduces the "self-medicative resource combination hypothesis," suggesting that different combinations of ingested resources could improve health outcomes for chimpanzees.
  • Two analytical tools (collocation and APRIORI analyses) are presented to explore these resource combinations, with results from the Sonso chimpanzee community showing up to 60% agreement, indicating that APRIORI may be better for studying complex interactions among multiple resources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Primate social organizations, or grouping patterns, vary significantly across species. Behavioral strategies that allow for flexibility in grouping patterns offer a means to reduce the costs of group living. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) have a fission-fusion social system in which temporary subgroups ("parties") change in composition because of local socio-ecological conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The social complexity hypothesis for the evolution of communication posits that complex social environments require greater communication complexity for individuals to effectively manage their relationships. We examined how different socially uncertain contexts, reflecting an increased level of social complexity, relate to variation in signalling within and between two species, which display varying levels of fission-fusion dynamics (sympatric-living chimpanzees and sooty mangabeys, Taï National Park, Ivory Coast). Combined signalling may improve message efficacy, notably when involving different perception channels, thus may increase in moments of high social uncertainty.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Understanding the origins of human social cognition is a major challenge, with 'Theory of Mind' (ToM) often used to explain its uniqueness, but recent research on 'implicit' ToM suggests that some precursor abilities exist in infants and great apes.
  • However, existing research faces challenges like circular reasoning and lack of consistent evidence, prompting a need for better theoretical frameworks.
  • The article proposes adapting 'script theory' to provide a new lens for interpreting social behavior, suggesting that pre-verbal infants and great apes can detect agency and understand non-mentalistic goals, which helps clarify how they predict behavior without relying solely on ToM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Abstract: Primates understand the meaning of their own and other species' alarm calls, but little is known about how they acquire such knowledge. Here, we combined direct behavioural observations with playback experiments to investigate two key processes underlying vocal development: comprehension and usage. Especifically, we studied the development of con- and heterospecific alarm call recognition in free-ranging sooty mangabeys, , across three age groups: young juveniles (1-2y), old juveniles (3-4y) and adults (> 5y).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Through syntax, i.e., the combination of words into larger phrases, language can express a limitless number of messages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Social learning is beneficial in almost every domain of a social animal's life, but it is particularly important in the context of predation and foraging. In both contexts, social animals tend to produce acoustically distinct vocalizations, alarms, and food calls, which have remained somewhat of an evolutionary conundrum as they appear to be costly for the signaller. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that food calls function to direct others toward novel food items, using a playback experiment on a group of chimpanzees.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Primate alarm calls are mainly hardwired but individuals need to adapt their calling behaviours according to the situation. Such learning necessitates recognising locally relevant dangers and may take place via their own experience or by observing others. To investigate monkeys alarm calling behaviour, we carried out a field experiment in which we exposed juvenile vervet monkeys to unfamiliar raptor models in the presence of audiences that differed in experience and reliability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The alarm calls of nonhuman primates are occasionally cited as functionally equivalent to lexical word meaning in human language. Recently, however, it has become increasingly unlikely that one-to-one relations between alarm call structures and predator categories are the default, mainly because many call types are produced in multiple contexts, requiring more complex notions of meaning. For example, male vervet monkeys produce the same alarm calls during encounters with terrestrial predators and neighbouring groups, suggesting that recipients require additional information to attribute meaning to the calls.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * This study adds five new interspecies grooming observations involving female chimpanzees and members of the Cercopithecus genus, along with a unique play interaction between juvenile chimpanzees and a red-tailed monkey.
  • * The research explores the potential functions, costs, and benefits of interspecies grooming, suggesting it could provide insights into chimpanzee social behavior and their ability to navigate different species interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dialects are a cultural property of animal communication previously described in the signals of several animal species. While dialects have predominantly been described in vocal signals, chimpanzee leaf-clipping and other 'leaf-modifying' gestures, used across chimpanzee and bonobo communities, have been suggested as a candidate for cultural variation in gestural communication. Here we combine direct observation with archaeological techniques to compare the form and use of leaf-modifying gestures in two neighbouring communities of East African chimpanzees.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human economic decision-making sometimes appears to be irrational. Partly, this is due to cognitive biases that can lead to suboptimal economic choices and context-dependent risk-preferences. A pertinent question is whether such biases are part of our evolutionary heritage or whether they are culturally acquired.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF