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  • One of the other things that we're interested in about these monkeys and apes

  • are their vocalizations. Because of vocal- if we really go in with the idea

  • that we evolved from something like the common ancestor of us and these creatures,

  • then maybe we can find some hints of our language in their vocal communication.

  • In the mid-1960s there was a very intersting discovery made; at the time, people thought

  • that, uhm, whenever a monkey gave a vocalization it was just sort of an involuntary

  • cry, like, "Ah!" you shout as you pull your hand back from the hot stove, or as

  • you're surprised as someone jumps out at you. And they don't usually use words-

  • sounds the way we use words, as voluntary signals that designate some feature

  • of the environment.

  • There are vervet monkeys in east Africa. They are small, grey monkeys that live in groups

  • of about 20 or so, and they were found, or thought, to give different alarm calls

  • to different predators. And the calls elicited different responses.

  • The monkeys would be out on the grass, and one of them would see a leopard and

  • give this distinctive leopard alarm call, and all the monkeys, all the other monkeys in the group,

  • upon hearing this call, ran up into a tree.

  • As if they had learned from the first guy's alarm call that there was a leopard nearby, and this caused them

  • to run up into the tree.

  • If an animal saw an eagle, and gave a very different alarm call, the other monkeys, upon hearing that

  • call, looked up in the air. Or they ran into a bush. But they didn't go up into a tree,

  • because eagles a very good at zipping through the branches and plucking off a monkey.

  • And if the first monkey to see the predator saw a snake, usually a python,

  • and gave this third kind of alarm call, the other monkeys in the group, upon hearing it,

  • stood on their hind legs and looked all in the grass around them.

  • Are the alarm calls really words? Are they really saying, "leopard"?

  • One possibility is that the alarm calls are just generalized alerting devices, sort of

  • like me saying, "Yo!" and then you don't know what I've seen, but you look up, you see the

  • leopard, and then you run up into the tree.

  • In that case they really wouldn't be like words very much. So we did an experiment

  • in which we waited until these vervets were foraging out on the- on the grass,

  • and then we hid a loudspeaker in a bush and played a leopard alarm call.

  • There's no leopard around, so it's just the call.

  • Everybody ran up into the trees.

  • If we played them an eagle alarm call, they looked up into the air.

  • And if we played them a snake alarm call, they stood on their hind legs and looked

  • in the grass around them.

  • And they really seemed to act as this- as if this call designated some feature of the

  • environment. And they responded according to their own vulnerability.

  • It- it's the first evidence of how you might, in a non-human animal,

  • get something that's very simple, it's not language, but it's a little bit like a word.

  • It's just the sort of thing that we might expect to find in an animal

  • with whom we share this ancestry. It's a sort of- of first gleanings of something

  • that might eventually become language.

One of the other things that we're interested in about these monkeys and apes

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