Bonobosâthe closest living relatives to humansâcreate complex and meaningful combinations of calls resembling the word combinations of humans, says a new study that challenges long-held assumptions about what makes human communication unique.
The study conducted by researchers at Harvard and the University of Zurich, has investigated the vocal behavior of wild bonobos on the Kokolopori Community Reserve in Democratic Republic of Congo.
The team used novel methods borrowed from linguistics to demonstrate for the first time that, similarly to human language, bonobo vocal communication relies extensively on âcompositionalityâ.
Compositionality is the capacity to combine meaningful words into phrases whose meaning is related to the meaning of the words and the way they are combined.
In more trivial compositionality, the meaning of the combination is the addition of its parts: for example, âblond dancerâ refers to a person who is both blond and a dancer. However, in more complex, nontrivial compositionality, one part of the combination modifies the other. For example, âbad dancerâ does not refer to a bad person who is also a dancer: âbadâ in this case does not have an independent meaning but complements âdancerâ.
In a first step, the researchers applied a method developed by linguists to quantify the meaning of human words. âThis allowed us to create a bonobo dictionary of sorts â a complete list of bonobo calls and their meaning,â said MĂ©lissa Berthet, a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Evolutionary Anthropology of UZH and lead researcher of the study.
âThis represents an important step towards understanding the communication of other species, as it is the first time that we have determined the meaning of calls across the whole vocal repertoire of an animal.â
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After determining the meaning of single bonobo vocalizations, the researchers then moved on to investigating call combinations, using the technique borrowed from linguistics.
Credit: Lukas Bierhoff / Kokolopori Bonobo Research ProjectâWith our approach, we were able to quantify how the meaning of bonobo single calls and call combinations relate to each other,â says Simon Townsend, UZH Professor and senior author of the study.
The researchers found numerous call combinations that bore a striking resemblance to the more complex nontrivial compositional structures in human language. âThis suggests that the capacity to combine call types in complex ways is not as unique to humans as we once thought,â says MĂ©lissa Berthet.
An important implication of this research is the potential light it sheds on the evolutionary roots of languageâs compositional nature.
âSince humans and bonobos had a common ancestor approximately 7 to 13 million years ago, they share many traits by descent, and it appears that compositionality is likely one of them,â says Harvard Professor Martin Surbeck, co-author of the study published in the Journal Science.
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The findings indicate that the ability to construct complex meanings from smaller vocal units existed long before human language emerged, and that bonobo vocal communication shares more similarities with human language than previously thought.
âOur study suggests that our ancestors already extensively used compositionality at least 7 million years ago, if not more,â concluded Simon Townsend.
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