Non-adjacent dependency processing (or lack thereof) in bonobos: an artificial grammar experiment
Maël Leroux, Nicole J. Lahiff, Chiara Zulberti, Amanda Epping, Calle Uerling, Jared P. Taglialatela, Jutta L. Mueller, Stuart K. Watson, Simon W. Townsend

TL;DR
This study tests whether bonobos can process syntactic relationships in sounds, finding no evidence of such abilities.
Contribution
The study provides new data on bonobos' capacity for processing syntactic dependencies using an artificial grammar paradigm.
Findings
Bonobos showed no evidence of processing adjacent or non-adjacent dependencies in the artificial grammar.
The findings challenge claims of homologous origins for syntactic processing in primates.
Abstract
A key feature of language is our capacity to process syntactic relationships between words, whether they are directly sequential (‘adjacent dependencies’) or separated by other words (‘non-adjacent dependencies’). Recent data suggest that the basic ability to compute adjacent and non-adjacent dependencies is not uniquely human, but rooted deep within our primate lineage, perhaps as far back as our last shared ancestor with chimpanzees and common marmosets (approx. 40 Ma). However, this conclusion hinges on comparable data from other non-human primate species, in particular from bonobos, to whom we are equidistantly related to chimpanzees. To further explore this ancestral hypothesis, we tested if bonobos process both adjacent and non-adjacent dependencies in an artificial grammar learning paradigm. We habituated subjects to strings of arbitrary acoustic stimuli comprised of predictive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Vocal Communication and Behavior · Language and cultural evolution · Primate Behavior and Ecology
