Chiara De Gregorio
@chiaradg.bsky.social
72 followers 93 following 4 posts
Post-doc @ Warwick University - Ethology / Primatology / Bioacoustics
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Reposted by Chiara De Gregorio
isbe2026.bsky.social
The Local Organizing Commitee welcomes behavioral ecologists from across the world and of all career stages to enjoy a five-day meeting rich in top-notch science and ample networking opportunities in Turin (Italy), 20-24 July 2026.
chiaradg.bsky.social
"Complexity doesn’t always need words. The rhythms, patterns and structures we have uncovered in orangutan alarms remind us that meaningful communication can emerge in many forms, and that the roots of our language may lie not just in what is said, but how it is expressed"
What the hidden rhythms of orangutan calls can tell us about language – new research
Recursion was thought to be a unique feature of human language.
theconversation.com
Reposted by Chiara De Gregorio
primatology.net
Orangutans organize alarm calls using recursive rhythms—layered like Russian dolls—revealing cognitive roots of language once thought unique to humans. #Anthropology #Primates #LanguageEvolution #Orangutans #Recursion
The Rhythms of the Forest: Orangutan Calls and the Evolutionary Roots of Language
How Sumatran Apes Taught Scientists a New Way to Think About Human Communication
www.primatology.net
chiaradg.bsky.social
Out today in Ann NY Acad Sci: orangutans show third-order rhythmic nesting in alarm calls—like music, rhythms within rhythms within rhythms. They adjust tempo and rhythm by threat type: faster for credible threats 🐯, slower for less credible alarms 🔵. doi.org/10.1111/nyas...
chiaradg.bsky.social
NLP may arise from both physiological constraints and communicative functions, with sexual dimorphism and age patterns hinting at additional selective pressures. ➡️ Check out the full article on the new Phil Trans B issue: doi.org/10.1098/rstb...
Reposted by Chiara De Gregorio
marcogamba.bsky.social
Have the courage to look them in the face! Because their faces can tell us a lot! Filippo and Dayanna made a massive effort and studied the faces of cotton-top tamarins with deep learning—a striking step for our visual communication studies! onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Reposted by Chiara De Gregorio
mongabay.com
The indri, a critically endangered lemur only found in Madagascar’s rainforest, might hold clues about the human knack for musicality, a Mongabay video explains.

Watch the full video: “What singing lemurs can tell us about the origin of music”

news.mongabay.com/video/2025/0...
chiaradg.bsky.social
Published today! Here we show how social life shapes musical timing in a duetting monkey... and how hard is singing while parenting! 🙈 🎶 doi.org/10.1098/rspb...
@marcogamba.bsky.social