一项新研究表明,人类与类人猿自进化谱系分化以来,发笑方式始终存在相似性。
这一结论从何而来?研究人员对13只圈养类人猿——包括大猩猩、红毛猩猩、黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩——进行挠痒实验,并留存相关音频。这项新研究重新分析了这批数十年前的录音资料,并将其与最新采集的样本进行对照:四名幼儿在家中被挠痒或嬉戏时发出的咯咯笑声。
研究人员表示,结果显示人类与类人猿的笑声节奏相近,笑声的间隔规律一致。这一共性很可能源于二者拥有共同的祖先。
“从某种意义上说,我们与其他类人猿十分相似——1500万年来,我们的发笑方式始终十分接近。”该研究作者、英国华威大学灵长类动物学家基娅拉·德·格雷戈里奥(Chiara De Gregorio)说道。
笑声无需借助语言,就能传达嬉戏、愉悦的情绪。很多动物也会发笑,但它们的笑声与人类差异较大。例如,当研究人员挠老鼠痒时,老鼠会发出超声波级的吱吱声作为回应。
致力于揭示笑声演化历程的科学家,此前已对动物的面部表情展开细致分析,但针对笑声本身的研究相对较少。与猿类相比,人类的笑声演化得更快、更复杂。例如,我们的笑声会随场景发生变化,从同事间的礼貌轻笑,到与密友相处时发自内心的开怀大笑。
“可以说,人类堪称笑声大师。”德·格雷戈里奥表示。该研究成果于周四发表在《通讯·生物学》(Communications Biology)期刊上。
美国里昂学院(Lyon College)研究动物交流的学者布里塔妮·弗洛基维奇(Brittany Florkiewicz)并未参与这项研究,她指出,不同物种会演化出适配自身社群生活的笑声。她认为这项研究的结论合乎逻辑,并表明该领域仍需开展更多深入研究。
弗洛基维奇表示,她希望收集狗、马、猫这类会做出嬉戏类面部表情的动物的同类录音样本。这有助于我们更深入地了解笑声的演化过程,从而“理解人类独有的特质,以及人类与其他动物的共通之处”。
研究笑声的起源看似老套,实则关乎人类交流的重要维度,对理解他人以及语言习得过程具有重要价值。由于声音无法形成化石,科学家正依托现有证据逐步追溯其演化历程,每一段笑声都是解开谜题的线索。
美联社健康与科学部得到了霍华德·休斯医学研究所(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)科学教育部和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation)的支持。所有内容均由美联社独立负责。(财富中文网)
译者:中慧言-王芳
一项新研究表明,人类与类人猿自进化谱系分化以来,发笑方式始终存在相似性。
这一结论从何而来?研究人员对13只圈养类人猿——包括大猩猩、红毛猩猩、黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩——进行挠痒实验,并留存相关音频。这项新研究重新分析了这批数十年前的录音资料,并将其与最新采集的样本进行对照:四名幼儿在家中被挠痒或嬉戏时发出的咯咯笑声。
研究人员表示,结果显示人类与类人猿的笑声节奏相近,笑声的间隔规律一致。这一共性很可能源于二者拥有共同的祖先。
“从某种意义上说,我们与其他类人猿十分相似——1500万年来,我们的发笑方式始终十分接近。”该研究作者、英国华威大学灵长类动物学家基娅拉·德·格雷戈里奥(Chiara De Gregorio)说道。
笑声无需借助语言,就能传达嬉戏、愉悦的情绪。很多动物也会发笑,但它们的笑声与人类差异较大。例如,当研究人员挠老鼠痒时,老鼠会发出超声波级的吱吱声作为回应。
致力于揭示笑声演化历程的科学家,此前已对动物的面部表情展开细致分析,但针对笑声本身的研究相对较少。与猿类相比,人类的笑声演化得更快、更复杂。例如,我们的笑声会随场景发生变化,从同事间的礼貌轻笑,到与密友相处时发自内心的开怀大笑。
“可以说,人类堪称笑声大师。”德·格雷戈里奥表示。该研究成果于周四发表在《通讯·生物学》(Communications Biology)期刊上。
美国里昂学院(Lyon College)研究动物交流的学者布里塔妮·弗洛基维奇(Brittany Florkiewicz)并未参与这项研究,她指出,不同物种会演化出适配自身社群生活的笑声。她认为这项研究的结论合乎逻辑,并表明该领域仍需开展更多深入研究。
弗洛基维奇表示,她希望收集狗、马、猫这类会做出嬉戏类面部表情的动物的同类录音样本。这有助于我们更深入地了解笑声的演化过程,从而“理解人类独有的特质,以及人类与其他动物的共通之处”。
研究笑声的起源看似老套,实则关乎人类交流的重要维度,对理解他人以及语言习得过程具有重要价值。由于声音无法形成化石,科学家正依托现有证据逐步追溯其演化历程,每一段笑声都是解开谜题的线索。
美联社健康与科学部得到了霍华德·休斯医学研究所(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)科学教育部和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation)的支持。所有内容均由美联社独立负责。(财富中文网)
译者:中慧言-王芳
Humans and great apes have been giggling in similar ways since branching off the evolutionary tree, a new study suggests.
How do we know this? Researchers tickled 13 captive apes — including gorillas, orangutans, chimpanzees and bonobos — and recorded the results. The new research reexamined those decades-old recordings and compared them with the newly captured giggles of four young children while they were being tickled and playing at home.
It turns out that the chuckles of humans and great apes follow similar rhythms, with regular timing between their laughs, a uniting thread that likely reflects their ties to a common ancestor, researchers said.
“In a way, we are very similar to other great apes because we’ve been laughing in a similar way for 15 million years,” said study author Chiara De Gregorio, a primatologist at the University of Warwick in England.
Laughter communicates a playful, happy feeling without using words. Many animals can laugh too, but the giggles don’t follow human patterns as closely. When researchers tickle rats, for example, they respond with ultrasonic squeaks.
Scientists trying to uncover how laughter evolved have picked apart animals’ facial expressions, but less work has been done on how laughs sound. And compared with apes, human laughter has become faster and more complex. For one, our laughs sound different based on context — from a polite chuckle among colleagues to a full-bodied guffaw with close friends.
“We are like the masters of laughter, I would say,” said De Gregorio, whose findings were published Thursday in the journal Communications Biology.
These giggles evolved to best suit animals’ different social lives, said Brittany Florkiewicz, who studies animal communication at Lyon College and had no role in the new research. She said the study’s findings make sense, and point to a need for more investigation.
Florkiewicz said she’d like to hear comparable recordings of other animals with playful facial expressions, like dogs, horses and cats. That could tell us more about how laughter evolved, so we can “understand what makes us uniquely human, but also what is similar between humans and other animals.”
Studying the origins of laughter may seem corny, but it’s one aspect of human communication that can help us understand others — including how we learned to speak. Because sounds don’t fossilize, scientists are using the evidence we do have to trace things back, one chuckle at a time.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.