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4 Messages a Pantomiming Orangutan Might Be Trying to Convey

Discover how orangutans use complex gestures and pantomimes to communicate, showcasing their intelligence in unique ways.

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Stop patting yourself on the back. You're not so special. Orangutans, a new study suggests, also use complex gestures or pantomimes to communicate. Looking through twenty years worth of orangutan observations, researchers believe they have found 18 examples of pantomimes. The study, which appeared today in Biology Letters, supports the claim that we're not unique when it comes to abstract communication and lends credence to other observations of great ape gesturing, according to lead researcher Anne Russon.

[Orangutans and chimpanzees were already known] to throw an object when angry, for example. But that is a far cry from displaying actions that are intentionally symbolic and referential--the behaviour known as pantomiming. "Pantomime is considered uniquely human," says Anne Russon from York University in Toronto, Canada. "It is based on imitation, recreating behaviours you have seen somewhere else, which can be considered complex and beyond the grasp of most non-human species." [New ...

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