Literature DB >> 19091390

Contrast of hand preferences between communicative gestures and non-communicative actions in baboons: implications for the origins of hemispheric specialization for language.

Adrien Meguerditchian1, Jacques Vauclair.   

Abstract

Gestural communication is a modality considered in the literature as a candidate for determining the ancestral prerequisites of the emergence of human language. As reported in captive chimpanzees and human children, a study in captive baboons revealed that a communicative gesture elicits stronger degree of right-hand bias than non-communicative actions. It remains unclear if it is the communicative nature of this manual behavior which induces such patterns of handedness. In the present study, we have measured hand use for two uninvestigated behaviors in a group of captive olive baboons: (1) a non-communicative self-touching behavior ("muzzle wipe" serving as a control behavior), (2) another communicative gesture (a ritualized "food beg") different from the one previously studied in the literature (a species-specific threat gesture, namely "hand slap") in the same population of baboons. The hand preferences for the "food beg" gestures revealed a trend toward right-handedness and significantly correlated with the hand preferences previously reported in the hand slap gesture within the same baboons. By contrast, the hand preferences for the self-touching behaviors did not reveal any trend of manual bias at a group-level nor correlation with the hand preferences of any communicative gestures. These findings provide additional support to the hypothesized existence in baboons of a specific communicative system involved in the production of communicative gestures that may tend to a left-hemispheric dominance and that may differ from the system involved in purely motor functions. The hypothetical implications of these collective results are discussed within the theoretical framework about the origins of hemispheric specialization for human language.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19091390     DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2008.10.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Lang        ISSN: 0093-934X            Impact factor:   2.381


  8 in total

1.  Neurophysiological origin of human brain asymmetry for speech and language.

Authors:  Benjamin Morillon; Katia Lehongre; Richard S J Frackowiak; Antoine Ducorps; Andreas Kleinschmidt; David Poeppel; Anne-Lise Giraud
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-10-18       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  The sound of one-hand clapping: handedness and perisylvian neural correlates of a communicative gesture in chimpanzees.

Authors:  Adrien Meguerditchian; Molly J Gardner; Steven J Schapiro; William D Hopkins
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Concealing of facial expressions by a wild Barbary macaque (Macaca sylvanus).

Authors:  Maria Thunström; Paul Kuchenbuch; Christopher Young
Journal:  Primates       Date:  2014-04-27       Impact factor: 2.163

4.  Evolutionary and developmental implications of asymmetric brain folding in a large primate pedigree.

Authors:  Elizabeth G Atkinson; Jeffrey Rogers; James M Cheverud
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2016-02-11       Impact factor: 3.694

Review 5.  Evolutionary origins of human handedness: evaluating contrasting hypotheses.

Authors:  Hélène Cochet; Richard W Byrne
Journal:  Anim Cogn       Date:  2013-04-02       Impact factor: 3.084

6.  Human infants and baboons show the same pattern of handedness for a communicative gesture.

Authors:  Helene Meunier; Jacques Vauclair; Jacqueline Fagard
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-03-21       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Context-Dependent Gestural Laterality: A Multifactorial Analysis in Captive Red-Capped Mangabeys.

Authors:  Juliette Aychet; Noémie Monchy; Catherine Blois-Heulin; Alban Lemasson
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-13       Impact factor: 2.752

8.  Broca's cerebral asymmetry reflects gestural communication's lateralisation in monkeys (Papio anubis).

Authors:  Yannick Becker; Nicolas Claidière; Konstantina Margiotoudi; Damien Marie; Muriel Roth; Bruno Nazarian; Jean-Luc Anton; Olivier Coulon; Adrien Meguerditchian
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 8.140

  8 in total

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