positional spacer
Laboratory News - The Scientists' Online Newspaper LabNews Calendar 2009

Search:

Laboratory and science talk
 
Laboratory News Directory

 Product Categories

 Biochemistry [24]

 Biotechnology [6]

 Chemistry [34]

 Consumables [48]

 Engineering [67]

 Environment [6]

 Haematology [2]

 Health [10]

 Health & Safety [35]

 Imaging [18]

 Lab Design & Storage [47]

 Lab Services [28]

 Microbiology [18]

 Pharma [13]

 Recruitment [1]

 Sample Preparation [42]

 Separation Techniques [17]

 Software [43]

 Spectroscopy [12]

 Test Equipment [11]

 OTHER CATEGORIES

 Associations [68]

 

Laboratory News Directory is
not responsible for the content of external internet sites

 
 
 
 
 

Date:  

You are here: Science News - Sign up to receive an email newsletter

Gorilla study hints at origin of human speech

A new study provides evidence that gorilla communication is linked to the left hemisphere of the brain - just as it is in humans.

 

 
Studying non-verbal communication of gorillas could be useful for human language impairments
Psychologist Dr Gillian Sebestyen Forrester, of the University of Sussex, developed a new method of analysing the behaviour of gorillas in captivity and found there was a right-handed bias for actions that also involved head and mouth movements. The right side of the body is controlled by the left hemisphere of the brain, which is also the location for language development.

The findings could provide major clues as to how language developed in humans. Dr Sebestyen Forrester said: “We shared 23 million years of evolution with great apes and then diverged approximately six million years ago. Gorillas have highly-complex forms of non-verbal communication. I think we are looking back at what sort of communication skills we may have once had.”

Previous studies by other researchers have found that chimpanzees show a right-handed preference for manual tasks. But Dr Sebestyn Forrester's research is the first to indicate a link between right-handedness and communication in apes.

The key to her findings, published Animal Behaviour, is the development of a detailed method for observing animals. “I have moved away from just studying visual communication signals of gorillas to looking for a method to capture code and analyse these signals,” she said. “For example, instead of subjectively labelling a behaviour as aggressive, I break down the behaviour into a sequence of stages based on eye gaze, facial expression and physical action. And I look for recurrent patterns within social context.”

The method - known as multidimensional method (MDM) - can also be used to study other non-verbal groups. Dr Forrester is now piloting a study of children aged between two and four years with language impairments. “Data from this method could help us to better understand the nonverbal communication signals that were important for the evolution of language and are still necessary for the development of normal language skills,” she said.

Printer friendly version of Laboratory News articlePrinter Friendly version

 

Comment on this article

Labnews.co.uk is your website - so tell us what you think. Just complete the form below, and lets get the debate started!

 

Name:

Email:
This field is optional and will only be used if we need to contact you.
Your email address will not be displayed on the site.


Comment:

Please enter the characters shown in the image below

 

captcha



 

See other news items

Euro threat to MRI scanners
The new wave
A real blow for the sneezes
'Tis the season to be contrary
...FIVE gold rings
Is UK business missing out on science talent?
Bloodhound seeks 1,000mph record
First images of multi-planet system
Search for origin of life reaches interstellar dust
Stone baked fossils give up secrets
DNA - protein journey controlled by activator
Science to mend a broken heart
Mother’s mental health affects baby
Wine set to go wireless
LHC technology set for a googlewhack
Division over animal testing laws
Golfers - can you become king of the swingers?
Face more important that policy in politics
Mars trip a step closer as nuclear research inspires “space-shield”
Despite some good news - financial crisis will hit R&D
Collaboration set to eliminate cold-chain distribution
Ancient TB 3000 years older than thought
Double pronged observations probe black hole
International mission to discover Antarctic secrets
Rock detectives turn back time
Getting to know the genome of your bugs
Everest study shows neuron loss when climbing

Laboratory News ArchiveVisit the Laboratory News archive

Laboratory News Feature ArchiveVisit the Laboratory Science and Research Features archive
Laboratory News Products ArchiveVisit the Laboratory Products, Equipment and Supplies archive

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
positional spacer