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Principal
Investigator:
William D. Hopkins
Associate Professor of Psychology
Berry College
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BEHAVIORAL AND
NEUROANATOMICAL ASYMMETRIES IN BONOBOS, PAN PANISCUS
OVERVIEW
The long-term objectives of the proposed studies are to
understand the role that early environment plays in the
development of asymmetries in manual gestures and facial
expressions and their relationship to different structures
of the brain. In the proposed research, behavioral studies
on functional asymmetries in hand use for gestural communication
and facial expressions used with referential vocalizations
will be correlated with neuroanatomical asymmetries as
assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Specifically,
whether hand use for gestures represents a unique functional
asymmetry or whether it reflects a general asymmetry for
all motor functions will be assessed by comparing handedness
indices for gestures compared to motor tasks with similar
situational demands. In another series of experiments,
the influence of vocal communication on the expression
of hand use for referential gestures will be assessed to
determine whether the vocal signals enhance or inhibit
the magnitude of asymmetries in communicative behavior.
In a third set of experiments, asymmetries in facial expressions
that made by bonobos that have a referential function will
be compared to asymmetries in facial expressions that are
not accompanied by the use of a referential vocalization.
Finally, asymmetries in gestural communication and facial
expressions will be correlated with asymmetries in the
brain from specific regions of interest including the planum
temporale, motor/hand area of the precentral gyrus, cingulate
gyrus and basal ganglia. Of specific interest in all analyses
will be the comparison of ape subjects that have been reared
by humans compared to those reared by conspecifics. This
comparison will allow for determination of how human environments
and communication systems alter the development of communicative
behavior and the cerebral organization of chimpanzees.
Overall, the proposed research will lead a better understanding
of factors which influence the development of laterality
in the central nervous systems and behavioral and communicative
correlates of these asymmetries.
Performance Sites:
» Great Ape Trust of Iowa Des Moines, Iowa
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
» Culture Prefigures Cognition
in Pan/Homo Bonobos
» Cultural Apprenticeship:
Social Processes In The Ontogeny of Object Use in Pan paniscus
» Behavioral and Neuroanotomical
Asymmetries In Bonobos, Pan paniscus
» Development of Language,
Gesture and Play In Bonobos
» Comparative Analysis of
Orangutan and Bonobo Numerical Competence
» Basic Memory Processes In
Bonobos
» Conversational Vocal Exchanges
Among Bonobos
» Multimodal Analysis of Communicative
Behavior In Bonobos
» Investigations of Skill
Acquisition and Site Formation Processes with Groups of Stone-tool Making Apes
» Music Perception, Learning,
and Production In Apes
» Learning and Cognition Same
Different Conceptualization and Cross Modal Matching |