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Understanding the point of chimpanzee pointing: epigenesis and ecological validity.
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:01 authored by David LeavensDavid Leavens, William D Hopkins, Kim A BardPointing has long been considered to be a uniquely human, universal, and biologically based gesture. However, pointing emerges spontaneously, without explicit training, in captive chimpanzees. Because pointing is commonplace in captive chimpanzees and virtually absent in wild chimpanzees, and because both captive and wild chimpanzees are sampled from the same gene pool, pointing by captive apes is attributable to environmental influences on communicative development. If pointing by captive chimpanzees is so variably expressed in different rearing environments, this suggests that pointing by humans may also be attributable to situational factors that make pointing effective in certain developmental contexts.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Current Directions in Psychological ScienceISSN
0963-7214External DOI
Issue
4Volume
14Page range
185-189Pages
5.0Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes