Spontaneous Pointing Behaviour in the Wild Pygmy Chimpanzee (Pan paniscus)
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The adoption of pointing behaviour has been emphasised by researchers of human cognitive development as an act of communication prior to the appearance of language [1]. In human children, this behaviour first appears after about 12 months, although the capacity to understand directional signs from others appears a little later [2]. This apparently spontaneous behaviour has also been observed in chimpanzees in captivity (Pan troglodytes) in a social context, to attract the attention of the researcher or another chimpanzee [3, 4]. Chimpanzees can also be trained to do this, and Premack [5] used this as part of his experimental procedure, whereby one of several alternatives was indicated in order to solve a problem. Pointing behaviour is displayed most frequently by those chimpanzees who have undergone a prolonged training in a human environment and especially by pygmy chimpanzees in captivity [6]. During our research project [7–9] on etho-ecology of the pygmy chimpanzee in the Ikela region (Zaire), we had the opportunity to observe spontaneous pointing behaviour by this species:
[1] David A. Leavens,et al. Indexical and referential pointing in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). , 1996, Journal of comparative psychology.
[2] Roger Bakeman,et al. SPONTANEOUS GESTURAL COMMUNICATION AMONG CONSPECIFICS IN THE PYGMY CHIMPANZEE (Pan paniscus) , 1977 .
[3] David Premack,et al. Intelligence In Ape And Man , 1976 .