6 results match your criteria: "Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University[Affiliation]"
Anim Cogn
July 2015
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, 67207, Niederhausbergen, France,
The present study tested intentionality of a learned begging gesture and attention-reading abilities in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Subjects were trained to produce a begging gesture towards a hidden food reward that could be delivered by a human experimenter. More specifically, we investigated which attentional cues--body, face and/or eyes orientation of a human partner--were taken into account by the macaques in order to communicate with her.
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March 2015
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, 67207, Niederhausbergen, France,
We tested here whether Tonkean macaques (Macaca tonkeana), trained to produce a pointing gesture, modify their behaviour in response to different human's attentional states. More specifically, we investigated the macaque's ability to communicate intentionally about the location of an unreachable hidden food reward in several contexts which differ by the human partner's attentional state. The experimenter displayed seven attentional states differing on the basis of body, head and gaze orientation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Psychobiol
September 2013
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, 67207, Niederhausbergen, France.
We review four studies investigating hand preferences for grasping versus pointing to objects at several spatial positions in human infants and three species of nonhuman primates using the same experimental setup. We expected that human infants and nonhuman primates present a comparable difference in their pattern of laterality according to tasks. We tested 6 capuchins, 6 macaques, 12 baboons, and 10 human infants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Lang
August 2013
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, 67207 Niederhausbergen, France.
There are two conflicting hypotheses to explain the origins of language. Vocal origin theory states that language results from the gradual evolution of animals' vocal communication, but gestural origin theory considers that language evolved from gestures, with the initial left-hemispheric control of manual gestures gradually encompassing vocalizations. To contribute to this debate, we investigated functional hemispheric specialization related to hand biases when grasping or showing an object through manual gesture in Tonkean macaques.
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March 2013
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, 67207, Niederhausbergen, France.
A pointing gesture creates a referential triangle that incorporates distant objects into the relationship between the signaller and the gesture's recipient. Pointing was long assumed to be specific to our species. However, recent reports have shown that pointing emerges spontaneously in captive chimpanzees and can be learned by monkeys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2012
Primatology Centre of Strasbourg University, Fort Foch, Niederhausbergen, France.
To test the role of gestures in the origin of language, we studied hand preferences for grasping or pointing to objects at several spatial positions in human infants and adult baboons. If the roots of language are indeed in gestural communication, we expect that human infants and baboons will present a comparable difference in their pattern of laterality according to task: both should be more right-hand/left-hemisphere specialized when communicating by pointing than when simply grasping objects. Our study is the first to test both human infants and baboons on the same communicative task.
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