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Information in Animal Communication Information in Animal Communication
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Communication from Single Cells to Complex Systems Communication from Single Cells to Complex Systems
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Pragmatics and Contingency in Animal Communication Pragmatics and Contingency in Animal Communication
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Animal Communication and Human Language Animal Communication and Human Language
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Asymmetries in Signal Production and Perception Asymmetries in Signal Production and Perception
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Syntax and Recursion Syntax and Recursion
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Developmental Genetics and Language Evolution Developmental Genetics and Language Evolution
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Ancestral Stages in the Evolution of Human Speech Ancestral Stages in the Evolution of Human Speech
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Coevolution of Language and Cognition Coevolution of Language and Cognition
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter reviews what has been learned about animal thinking from the study of animal communication and considers what we might hope to learn in the future. It begins with a discussion on the importance of informational versus non-informational interpretations of animal communication and then considers what inferences can be drawn about the cognitive requirements of communication from the communicative abilities of simple organisms. It discusses the importance of context to the meaning of animal signals and the possibility of asymmetries in the neural processes underlying production versus reception. Current theories on the evolution of human language are reviewed and how the study of animal communication informs these theories.
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