Weave: Österreich - Belgien - Deutschland - Luxemburg - Polen - Schweiz - Slowenien - Tschechien
Disciplines
Biology (80%); Linguistics and Literature (20%)
Keywords
Evolution Of Language,
Domestication,
Wolves,
Dogs,
Cooperative Breeding
Abstract
Human language is incredibly complex and fundamentally different from any other form of
communication in the animal kingdomeven when compared to our closest relatives, the
great apes. Although great apes are highly intelligent, they do not communicate as we do.
This suggests that intelligence alone is not sufficient to explain the emergence of language.
One theory proposes that our ability to communicate arose not only because we are intelligent
but also because we are exceptionally cooperative. Humans collaborate in ways that are rare
in the animal kingdomespecially when it comes to raising children. This high level of
cooperation may have played a crucial role in the evolution of language.
To explore this idea, we plan to study wolvesanimals that are both intelligent and
cooperative and, like humans, raise their young together. We will observe how wolves
communicate in everyday situations that require teamwork, such as hunting for food,
defending against threats, or caring for pups. Using new technologies, we will track their
behavior and communication in natural environments as well as in specially designed
cooperation tests. For comparison, we will also study domestic dogs. While dogs, like
wolves, are intelligent, they have lost much of their original intraspecific cooperative abilities
through millennia of living alongside humans.
By comparing the two species, we hope to understand how cooperation and communication
are intertwined. Our primary goal, however, is to learn more about how cooperation
contributed to the evolution of human languageand, in doing so, gain new insights into
what makes human communication so unique.
- Klaus Zuberbühler, Universite de Neuchatel - Switzerland, international project partner