PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Wild chimpanzees learn how to communicate from relatives on mom’s side, not dad’s

Combinations of vocal and non-vocal signals are learned socially and unlikely to be controlled genetically

2025-08-05
(Press-News.org) Young chimpanzees learn their communication style from their mother and maternal relatives, but show little similarity to the communication behavior of their father and paternal relatives, according to a study publishing August 5th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Joseph Mine at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, and colleagues.

Human children learn how to communicate as they develop, and their communication behavior is heavily influenced by their main caregivers. Although chimpanzees also communicate using vocal signals, gestures, postures and facial expressions, it is unclear whether these behaviors are learned or determined genetically.

To investigate, researchers observed the behavior of 22 wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), which have been habituated to the presence of humans, in Kibale national park, Uganda. They recorded vocal signals, including grunts, barks and whimpers, as well as non-vocal communication, such as arm movements, gaze direction and body postures. They found that the chimpanzees’ communication style, measured as how many combinations of vocal and non-vocal behaviors they typically produced, showed a strong similarity to that of their mother and maternal relatives, but not of their father and paternal relatives. These results suggest that chimpanzees’ communication style may involve a learned component, since chimpanzee mothers are the main caregivers and fathers do not contribute to parenting.

The study shows that how chimpanzees combine vocal and non-vocal signals is unlikely to be as genetically determined as previously thought, and instead may be learned socially, similar to the way humans learn to communicate. All the chimpanzees observed in the study were over the age of 10, when they start to become more independent from their mother, indicating that influences of maternal kin have a lasting impact on chimpanzee communication behavior. The results imply that social learning of communication is more evolutionarily ancient than previously thought, the authors say.

Joseph Mine adds, “What we see is that certain chimpanzee mothers tend to produce many vocal-visual combinations, while others produce few. And the offspring end up behaving like the mothers, resulting in family-specific tendencies.”

Co-author Simon Townsend notes, “In humans, body language includes hand gestures and facial expressions, but also many subtle behaviours, like shifts in posture and gaze direction. With our approach, we were able to assess whether chimpanzees learn about these less salient features as well.”

Co-author Katie Slocombe concludes, “I think it’s fascinating that mothers who produce more visual behaviours when they vocalise, raise offspring that follow suit. The next exciting step will be to see if offspring are learning certain types of visual-vocal combinations from their mothers, in addition to the number of visual behaviours they produce when they vocalise.”

 

In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: http://plos.io/4lsNJkO   

Citation: Mine JG, Dees LC, Wilke C, Willems EP, Machanda ZP, Muller MN, et al. (2025) Chimpanzee mothers, but not fathers, influence offspring vocal–visual communicative behavior. PLoS Biol 23(8): e3003270. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003270

Author countries: Switzerland, France, United Kingdom, United States

Funding: This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (PP00P3_198912) to SWT (https://www.snf.ch/en); a European Research Council Consolidator Grant (724608) to KES (https://erc.europa.eu/homepage); the National Science Foundation Grants (NSF 0849380 and NSF 1355014) to ZPM (https://www.nsf.gov/) and the NCCR Evolving Language (SNSF Agreement #51NF40_180888) (https://evolvinglanguage.ch/). The sponsors did not play any role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Kids of obese parents more likely to develop obesity due to inheriting related genes

2025-08-05
A new study finds that kids with obesity are more likely to have obese parents because they inherit obesity-related genes, and to a smaller extent, are impacted indirectly by genes carried by the mother – even when those genes aren’t passed down. A new study led by Liam Wright of the University College London, UK, and colleagues, reports these findings August 5th in the open-access journal PLOS Genetics. Studies commonly show that children with obesity often have parents with obesity, but the cause of this trend has been poorly understood. ...

Mothers’ genes may shape children’s weight - even without being passed down

2025-08-05
A mother’s genetics may play a bigger role in determining whether a child becomes overweight than a father’s, as a result of a concept known as genetic nurture, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. Published in PLOS Genetics, the study analysed genetic and health data from 2,621 UK families in the Millennium Cohort Study, a UK birth cohort study of individuals born in 2001/02.  Researchers investigated how parents’ body mass index (BMI) and related genes influence their children’s weight and diet from birth to age 17. To do this, the team examined the association between parental BMI and ...

Zhou receives funding for novel performance profiling & analysis infrastructure for scientific deep learning workloads

2025-08-05
Zhou Receives Funding For Novel Performance Profiling & Analysis Infrastructure For Scientific Deep Learning Workloads Keren Zhou, Assistant Professor, Computer Science, College of Engineering and Computing (CEC), received funding for the project: “Collaborative Research: Elements: DLToolkit: A Novel Performance Profiling and Analysis Infrastructure for Scientific Deep Learning Workloads.”  The rapid adoption of deep learning (DL)-driven artificial intelligence (AI) applications makes it more crucial than ever ...

Sleeter receives funding for revolutionary war teaching guides

2025-08-05
Sleeter Receives Funding For Revolutionary War Teaching Guides Nathan Sleeter, Research Assistant Professor, History and Art History, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media (RRCHNM), College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS), received funding for: “Revolutionary War Teaching Guides.” Sleeter will develop the teaching guides which use Library of Congress primary sources to support educators on the topic of Black and Indigenous Americans during the Revolutionary War. Sleeter will also engage in outreach to promote the guides with educators.  He will use sources such as diaries, ...

Nature-inspired coding: dynamic laws of multispectral camouflage

2025-08-05
The research and design of an adjustable multispectral compatible infrared camouflage device based on the infrared radiation characteristics of Rosaceae plants, aims to achieve multifunctional compatibility of infrared camouflage, thermal management, laser stealth, and visible light camouflage. The device design employs a particle swarm optimization algorithm combined with the finite difference time domain method to obtain structural parameters: Cr/In3SbTe2(IST)/Ge/TiO2/Ge/ZnS (top cylindrical).Through experimental verification, it is demonstrated that in the amorphous state (aIST), the device can achieve simulated plant ...

Digital-coded metasurfaces: A comprehensive review of the new paradigm in wireless communication

2025-08-05
Professor Xufeng Jing’s research team at China Jiliang University has conducted a systematic study on wireless communication technologies based on metasurfaces. This paper provides a detailed introduction to the working principles and classifications of passive, active, and semi-active metasurfaces, with a particular focus on how digital-coded metasurfaces achieve precise control over the phase and polarization of electromagnetic waves through dynamic tuning of unit structures.  The research team emphasizes the core advantages of metasurfaces in wireless communication, including miniaturization, ...

Early pilot and prior studies point to increased butyrate and reduced spirochete signals; Tharos advances controlled veterinary trials

2025-08-05
Greenacres, FL and London, UK — July 31, 2025 Tharos Ltd today announced encouraging exploratory findings from a small, uncontrolled pilot evaluation of its enzyme‑rich malt extract (ERME), marketed as EquiNectar® for horses and CaniNectar® for dogs, and sold since 2018 as an animal feed supplement. Over four weeks, stool 16S rRNA gene sequencing showed a directional decline in low‑abundance sequence reads annotated to the genus Borrelia in a subset of animals. While stool‑based, genus‑level annotations are not diagnostic for Lyme disease or a measure of systemic organism burden, the coherence of these signals—together ...

Action curiosity algorithm boosts autonomous navigation in uncertain environments

2025-08-05
Self-driving cars know their own way in unpredictable traffic, thanks to path planning technology. Among current AI-driven efforts to make path planning more efficient and reliable, a research team has developed an optimization method proven especially effective in uncertain environments. The results were published June 3 under the title “Action-Curiosity-Based Deep Reinforcement Learning Algorithm for Path Planning in a Nondeterministic Environment” in Intelligent Computing, a Science Partner Journal. The team evaluated their method in a realistic ...

New study raises questions about how Ozempic affects muscle size and strength

2025-08-05
As use of the popular anti-diabetic and weight-loss drug Ozempic skyrockets, so have concerns about the medication’s side effects. One such side effect is loss of “lean mass”—body weight that isn’t fat—raising concerns that Ozempic could be reducing muscle mass and strength. New research in mice suggests that muscle mass changes less than expected, but muscles may still get weaker, pointing out an urgent need for clinical studies to pin down the full effects of the popular medications. “If we want to really help the individuals ...

Racial differences in screening eligibility by breast density after state-level insurance expansion

2025-08-05
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that policies for insurance coverage of supplemental screening based on breast density may have limited ability to improve early detection for Black women.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Anne Marie McCarthy, ScM, PhD, email annemcc@pennmedicine.upenn.edu.   (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.25216) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

There’s something fishy going on with great white sharks that scientists can’t explain

‘Sweet’ discovery reveals how glucose fuels cancer-fighting immune cells

KBH Energy Center to host symposium

Self assembling monolayer can improve lead-free perovskite solar cells too

Like us, pregnant roaches need more sleep

Unlocking the value of intangible assets abroad requires strong board oversight, new study finds

Internalizing stress may lead to cognitive decline in

'Arctic Monkeys': Early primates survived in cold climates, not tropical forests

How do cells prevent premature protein release? UIC study cracks the case

Study demonstrates excellent potential of earthquake early warning system in Alaska

Wild chimpanzees learn how to communicate from relatives on mom’s side, not dad’s

Kids of obese parents more likely to develop obesity due to inheriting related genes

Mothers’ genes may shape children’s weight - even without being passed down

Zhou receives funding for novel performance profiling & analysis infrastructure for scientific deep learning workloads

Sleeter receives funding for revolutionary war teaching guides

Nature-inspired coding: dynamic laws of multispectral camouflage

Digital-coded metasurfaces: A comprehensive review of the new paradigm in wireless communication

Early pilot and prior studies point to increased butyrate and reduced spirochete signals; Tharos advances controlled veterinary trials

Action curiosity algorithm boosts autonomous navigation in uncertain environments

New study raises questions about how Ozempic affects muscle size and strength

Racial differences in screening eligibility by breast density after state-level insurance expansion

Rapid access to emergency medical services within historically redlined areas

Findings show NT’s vital water source is drying – and it can be seen from space

Dancing against the current: Microbial survival strategy

New insights into tectonic movements in south-eastern Europe

EMBARGOED until 00:01 AEST, 6 August 2025: Great Barrier Reef more volatile with sharp declines in coral cover

Solving a dirty problem with sunlight and oil

Lupus Research Alliance announces 2025 Empowering Lupus Research Award recipients to support breakthroughs

New survey maps hundreds of satellite systems orbiting dwarf galaxies

Treatment for obstructive sleep apnea lowers heart risk for some patients, increases risk for others

[Press-News.org] Wild chimpanzees learn how to communicate from relatives on mom’s side, not dad’s
Combinations of vocal and non-vocal signals are learned socially and unlikely to be controlled genetically