Words matter: Reflections on language projects with chimpanzees and their implications

Beginning in the 1960s the first systematic projects dedicated to testing whether great apes could acquire some aspects of human language were conducted. The ape subjects demonstrated remarkable capacities to learn and use elements of either sign language or an artificial language. The results from...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of primatology 2020-10, Vol.82 (10), p.e23187-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Krause, Mark A., Beran, Michael J.
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description Beginning in the 1960s the first systematic projects dedicated to testing whether great apes could acquire some aspects of human language were conducted. The ape subjects demonstrated remarkable capacities to learn and use elements of either sign language or an artificial language. The results from research across several laboratories drew a mixture of excitement and skepticism, and critiques and debates have ensued since the earliest reports were published. This continues today. Terrace (2019, Nim: A chimpanzee who learned sign language. New York, NY: Columbia University Press) repeats many of the same points made decades earlier, and has added some additional critiques. That scientists hold different perspectives on what to conclude from ape language studies is expected. However, any conclusion one draws should be based upon available evidence, which we outline in this review. We also address the critiques offered by Terrace (2019), including the stance that apes cannot understand or use words. Focusing on symbol use by chimpanzees and bonobos we describe evidence that argues for understanding of words, including capacities for declarative communication and intersubjectivity found in these apes. We conclude that the many decades of research using a variety of symbol systems challenges the absolutist position that chimpanzees and bonobos cannot learn language or understand the concept of a word. The chimpanzee named Panzee with her lexigram keyboard. Research Highlights Terrace (2019) revived critiques of ape language studies, and elaborated on a few other insights about why he believes apes cannot use words. To address this critique, the existing body of published literature must be consulted, and doing so challenges Terrace's core arguments.
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subjects Animals
ape language
Apes
Behavior, Animal
Chimpanzees
communication
Hominids
Intersubjectivity
Kanzi
Laboratories
Language
Learning
Monkeys & apes
Nim
Pan paniscus
Pan troglodytes
Primates
Sign Language
symbols
Washoe
Words
Words (language)
title Words matter: Reflections on language projects with chimpanzees and their implications
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