Captive chimpanzees use their right hand to communicate with each other: implications for the origin of the cerebral substrate for language.
about
Chimpanzee alarm call production meets key criteria for intentionalityThe origin of human multi-modal communicationLeft brain, right brain: facts and fantasiesPrimate laterality and the biology and evolution of human handedness: a review and synthesis.Human infants and baboons show the same pattern of handedness for a communicative gesture.Contrast of hemispheric lateralization for oro-facial movements between learned attention-getting sounds and species-typical vocalizations in chimpanzees: extension in a second colonyEvolutionary origins of human handedness: evaluating contrasting hypotheses.Patterns of hemispheric specialization for a communicative gesture in different primate species.On the origins of human handedness and language: a comparative review of hand preferences for bimanual coordinated actions and gestural communication in nonhuman primates.Laterality in the gestural communication of wild chimpanzees.Hand preference for pointing and language development in toddlers.Baboons' hand preference resists to spatial factors for a communicative gesture but not for a simple manipulative action.The repertoire and intentionality of gestural communication in wild chimpanzees.An analysis of bimanual actions in natural feeding of semi-wild chimpanzees.A multifactorial investigation of captive gorillas' intraspecific gestural laterality.Manual lateralization in macaques: handedness, target laterality and task complexity.Right hand, left brain: genetic and evolutionary bases of cerebral asymmetries for language and manual action.Hand preference and its flexibility according to the position of the object: a study in cercopithecines examining spontaneous behaviour and an experimental task (the Bishop QHP task).Target animacy influences chimpanzee handedness.The sound of one-hand clapping: handedness and perisylvian neural correlates of a communicative gesture in chimpanzees.Target animacy influences gorilla handedness.Asymmetries in mother-infant behaviour in Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus).
P2860
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P2860
Captive chimpanzees use their right hand to communicate with each other: implications for the origin of the cerebral substrate for language.
description
2009 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2009 թուականի Մարտին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2009 թվականի մարտին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2009年の論文
@ja
2009年論文
@yue
2009年論文
@zh-hant
2009年論文
@zh-hk
2009年論文
@zh-mo
2009年論文
@zh-tw
2009年论文
@wuu
name
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@ast
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@en
type
label
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@ast
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@en
prefLabel
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@ast
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... rebral substrate for language.
@en
P2860
P1433
P1476
Captive chimpanzees use their ...... erebral substrate for language
@en
P2093
Jacques Vauclair
William D Hopkins
P2860
P356
10.1016/J.CORTEX.2009.02.013
P577
2009-03-10T00:00:00Z