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Principal Investigator:
Heidi Lyn
Research Scientist
Wildlife Conservation Society’s
New York Aquarium
Co-Investigator:
Patricia M. Greenfield
Professor of Psychology
University of California, Los Angeles
Co-Investigator:
Sonia Ragir
Professor of Anthropology
College of Staten Island, CUNY
Consultant:
Simone Pika
University of Alberta
| DEVELOPMENT
OF LANGUAGE, GESTURE AND PLAY IN BONOBOS
OVERVIEW
This project focuses on the development of three cognitive
behaviors (play, gesture and discourse) in a group of
bonobos (and one chimpanzee). For two language competent
bonobos, Panbanisha and Nyota, the development of these
three behaviors will be directly compared to each other,
to a language development timelines (also to be developed
during the grant period) and to the normal course of
development of these abilities in human children.
A video encoding software program will be developed
for use in the investigations which will promote compatibility
between studies, within and across projects. Investigations
into play will attempt to capture the emergence of communication
and rule-like behavior by watching videotaped play sequences
(utilizing a developmental video library of four bonobos
and a chimpanzee, taken from the ages of 0 – 48
months) over a number of episodes – paying attention
to the repetition of sequences, schematization, and
gestures that frequently appear at various points in
the behavioral stream.
Additional investigations will explore the co-development
of language and deictic (pointing) gestures, iconic
(visually representational) gestures, conventional (lexical
representational) gestures and gestural combinations.
These will be, in the main, developmental studies utilizing
the video database and an utterance database that details
all utterances made at the keyboard for Panbanisha and
Panpanzee. However, we will also utilize known experimental
methodologies to explore the distinction between declarative
and imperative e pointing and the possible comprehension
and use of declarative points by the bonobo group. Finally,
a further set of investigations will include an exploration
of developmental use of co-construction of combinations
by apes and their human caregivers and a series of experiments
to explore the use of conversational repair.
Performance Sites:
» Center on the Evolution of Intelligence
Osborne Laboratories
» New York Aquarium, Wildlife Conservation Society, Brooklyn, NY
» Great Ape Trust of Iowa, Des Moines, IA
» College of Staten Island, Staten Island, NY
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
» Culture Prefigures Cognition
in Pan/Homo Bonobos
» Cultural Apprenticeship:
Social Processes In The Ontogeny of Object Use in Pan paniscus
» Behavioral and Neuroanotomical
Asymmetries In Bonobos, Pan paniscus
» Development of Language,
Gesture and Play In Bonobos
» Comparative Analysis of
Orangutan and Bonobo Numerical Competence
» Basic Memory Processes In
Bonobos
» Conversational Vocal Exchanges
Among Bonobos
» Multimodal Analysis of Communicative
Behavior In Bonobos
» Investigations of Skill
Acquisition and Site Formation Processes with Groups of Stone-tool Making Apes
» Music Perception, Learning,
and Production In Apes
» Learning and Cognition Same
Different Conceptualization and Cross Modal Matching |