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Indexical and referential pointing in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
226
Citations
31
References
1996
Year
PrimatologyNeurolinguisticsPsycholinguisticsCognitionLaboratory ChimpanzeesSocial SciencesIntentional CommunicationLanguage AcquisitionComparative PsychologyPrimate BehaviorLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesSpontaneous Index FingerReferential PointingSocial CognitionEvolutionary BiologyAnimal CommunicationAnimal MindAnimal Behavior
The spontaneous index finger and other referential pointing in 3 adult, laboratory chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) who have not received language training is reported. Of 256 total observed points, 254 were emitted in the presence of a human to objects in the environment; therefore, the points were communicative. Indicators of intentional communication used by the subjects included attention-getting behaviors, gaze alternation, and persistence until reward. Thus, pointing by these chimpanzees was intentionally communicative. These data imply that perspective-taking and referential communication are generalized hominoid traits, given appropriate eliciting contexts. Index finger pointing was more frequent with the subjects' dominant hands. This study refutes claims that indexical or referential pointing is species-unique to humans or dependent on linguistic competence or explicit training.
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