Vocal Communication in Primates
Title
Vocal Communication in Primates
Author
Slocombe, Katie E.
Research Area
Social Interactions
Topic
Primate Studies
Abstract
Vocal communication is common in the animal kingdom. Researchers often examine vocal communication in nonhuman primates (primates) with the aim of identifying similarities and differences with human language and speech, in order to trace the evolutionary origins of our complex communication system. Primates can produce distinct calls in response to specific events, such as the discovery of a certain predator, and listeners seem to understand what these calls refer to. Although on the surface there are similarities between this type of communication and human referential words, the mental processes that underlie them may be very different. While in general the flexibility shown by primate receivers may demonstrate some commonalities with humans, there is much more controversy over whether there are similarities between the production of primate vocalizations and language. It is widely accepted that primates, unlike humans, lack the ability to generate new vocalizations. Although this means primates have a closed repertoire of calls that cannot be expanded, primates are capable of combining their existing calls to generate new messages. The degree of voluntary control and intentionality involved in the use of calls is also a matter of debate, with recent evidence on both a neural and behavioral level challenging traditional assumptions that primate vocalizations are used in an automatic, reflexive manner. More research is needed to examine the mental processes underlying communicative behavior in both the producer and the receiver. In the future adopting a more holistic, multimodal approach to studying primate communication is likely to challenge and ultimately improve our understanding of primate communication and the evolution of human language.