Tickled apes reveal human laughter is 16 million years old
June 5th, 2009 - 12:50 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, June 5 (ANI): Tickling a gorilla or chimp can arouse bursts of grunting sounds - or laughter, say researchers who conclude that man’s laugh can be traced back to 10 to 16 million years ago.
Scientists reported the finding online on June 4th in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication.
“This study is the first phylogenetic test of the evolutionary continuity of a human emotional expression,” said Marina Davila Ross of the University of Portsmouth in the United Kingdom.
“It supports the idea that there is laughter in apes,” she added.
To reach the conclusion, researchers analysed the recorded sounds of tickle-induced vocalizations produced by infant and juvenile orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and bonobos, as well as those of human infants. A quantitative phylogenetic analysis of those acoustic data found that the best “tree” to represent the evolutionary relationships among those sounds matched the known evolutionary relationships among the five species based on genetics.
The researchers said that the findings support a common evolutionary origin for the human and ape tickle-induced expressions.
They also show that laughter evolved gradually over the last 10 to 16 million years of primate evolutionary history.
But human laughter is nonetheless acoustically distinct from that of great apes and reached that state through an evident exaggeration of pre-existing acoustic features after the hominin separation from ancestors shared with bonobos and chimps, about 4.5 to 6 million years ago, Davila Ross says.
For example, humans make laughter sounds on the exhale. While chimps do that too, they can also laugh with an alternating flow of air, both in and out. Humans also use more regular voicing in comparison to apes, meaning that the vocal cords regularly vibrate.
Davila Ross said they were surprised to find that gorillas and bonobos can sustain exhalations during vocalization that are three to four times longer than a normal breath cycle - an ability that had been thought to be a uniquely human adaptation, important to our capacity to speak.
“Taken together,” the researchers wrote, “the acoustic and phylogenetic results provide clear evidence of a common evolutionary origin for tickling-induced laughter in humans and tickling-induced vocalizations in great apes.
“While most pronounced acoustic differences were found between humans and great apes, interspecific differences in vocal acoustics nonetheless supported a quantitatively derived phylogenetic tree that coincides with the well-established, genetically based relationship among these species. At a minimum, one can conclude that it is appropriate to consider ‘laughter’ to be a cross-species phenomenon, and that it is therefore not anthropomorphic to use this term for tickling-induced vocalizations produced by the great apes.” (ANI)
- How human laughter is different from that of apes - Jul 21, 2010
- Great apes too make sophisticated decisions - Dec 30, 2011
- Gorillas play tag to maintain competitive edge: Study - Jul 14, 2010
- Human malarial parasite came from gorillas, not chimps - Sep 23, 2010
- Malaria came from gorillas thousands of years ago - Sep 24, 2010
- Just like humans, chimps giggle even when the joke isn't funny - Mar 02, 2011
- Sharing comes naturally to apes - Feb 02, 2010
- Sharing comes naturally to 'Peter Pan' apes - Feb 02, 2010
- Developmental delays may explain differences in behavior of ape species - Jan 29, 2010
- Bonobo chimps like humans may be hardwired to shake their heads to say 'no' - May 06, 2010
- 'Promiscuous' chimps produce more sperm - Feb 17, 2011
- Like humans, apes too play it safe when odds are uncertain - Nov 30, 2010
- Just like humans, apes suffer self-doubt too - Apr 19, 2010
- Some gorillas may eat monkeys - Mar 06, 2010
- Some males react to competition like chimps - Jun 29, 2010
Tags: acoustic data, acoustic features, bonobos, chimps, current biology, emotional expression, evolutionary history, evolutionary origin, evolutionary relationships, gorillas, great apes, human infants, human laughter, laughter sounds, orangutans, phylogenetic analysis, university of portsmouth, vocal cords, vocalization, vocalizations