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Author Spotlight: Investigating Vocal Information Representation in Small Primates and Its Alteration by Psychiatric Disorders Using Noninvasive EEG
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Recursive self-embedded vocal motifs in wild orangutans.

Adriano R Lameira1, Madeleine E Hardus2, Andrea Ravignani3,4,5

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom.

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|January 22, 2024
PubMed
Summary

Wild orangutans exhibit vocal recursion, nesting rhythmic calls within calls. This finding suggests early hominids may have developed complex vocalizations, potentially preceding human language evolution.

Keywords:
call sequencesgreat apesisochronyorangutansphysics of living systemsrecursionrhythmvocal combinatoricswild orangutans

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Area of Science:

  • Primate vocalizations
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Bioacoustics

Background:

  • Recursive procedures are key to human language (syntax, phonology).
  • No non-human primates show vocal recursion, suggesting a human-specific trait.
  • Understanding primate vocal complexity offers insights into language evolution.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate vocal recursion in non-human primates.
  • To explore potential evolutionary precursors to human language.
  • To analyze the structure of wild orangutan long calls.

Main Methods:

  • Field recording of wild male flanged orangutan long calls.
  • Acoustic analysis of call sequences and rhythmic structures.
  • Examination of hierarchical organization and temporal relationships within calls.

Main Results:

  • Wild orangutan long calls display nested isochronous sequences, indicating two hierarchical levels.
  • Lower-stratum call rhythms were not simple multiples of the higher stratum rhythm.
  • This temporal recursion occurs independently of syntax, semantics, or music.

Conclusions:

  • Orangutan vocalizations demonstrate a form of temporal recursion previously unknown in non-human primates.
  • This 'sequences within sequences' vocal behavior in hominids may represent an evolutionary precursor to human language recursion.
  • Findings challenge the notion of vocal recursion as exclusively human, offering insights into early hominid communication.