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Discovery

Cat Hobaiter on communication in apes

Discovery

BBC

Science, Technology

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 29 April 2019

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr Catherine Hobaiter studies how apes communicate with each other. Although she is based at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, she spends a lot of her time in the forests of Uganda, at the Budongo Research Centre. There, she is endlessly fascinated by the behaviour of great apes. Cat Hobaiter tells Jim al-Khalili about the difficulties of carrying out research on chimps in the wild. It can take years to win the trust of the apes. She says that her approach is to adopt the attitude of a moody teenager. Look bored and the chimps will ignore her, but at the same time she is watching them closely. Her particular research area is in understanding not the sounds that apes make, but their gestures. From her observations she has found that they use around 80 different gestures - many of which are common, in the sense that they have the same meaning, across different species like chimps and bonobos. One thing she and her team hope to learn from these studies is how we humans have evolved spoken language. (Photo: Dr Catherine Hobaiter)

Transcript

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There can't be many scientists who reference Dr. Doolittle in the first line of a serious research paper,

1:12.0

but that's exactly what my

1:13.4

guest today did. She is the primatologist Catherine Cat Hobator who maybe

1:18.8

doesn't talk to the animals but she does study how apes communicate with each other.

1:24.0

Although she's based at the University of St Andrews in Scotland,

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