TEMPORAL ORGANIZATION OF ACTION IN BABOONS - COMPARISONS WITH THE TEMPORAL SEGMENTATION IN CHIMPANZEE AND HUMAN-BEHAVIOR

Citation
I. Ott et al., TEMPORAL ORGANIZATION OF ACTION IN BABOONS - COMPARISONS WITH THE TEMPORAL SEGMENTATION IN CHIMPANZEE AND HUMAN-BEHAVIOR, Brain, behavior and evolution, 44(2), 1994, pp. 101-107
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences
ISSN journal
00068977
Volume
44
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
101 - 107
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-8977(1994)44:2<101:TOOAIB>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The durations of sequences of functionally related movements, or actio n units, were analysed in the baboons Papio hamadryas and Papio anubis . Action units are completed within a narrow time span or temporal seg ment as found previously in pongids and humans. Although the temporal segmentation is generally similar in the three species, baboons show s everal differences from both chimpanzees and humans. Firstly, their te mporal segments are shorter and less variable and the different sorts of action units, such as hand-body contact or interactions with an obj ect, show slight but significant differences in duration. Secondly, th ose action units that consist of movements occurring twice last almost twice as long as action units without repetitions. In contrast, in ch impanzees and humans, repetition of a set of movements compresses the first set so that the action unit duration does not increase. This is thought to be due to a form of presyntactical motor planning. Its abse nce in baboons shows that presyntactical motor planning is confined to those primates with language ability and so provides further support for a relationship between motor and language systems.