
Lecture | Chris Krupenye "The Social Minds of Humans and Other Apes"
Chris Krupenye | Psychological & Brain Sciences | Johns Hopkins University
"The Social Minds of Humans and Other Apes"
Humans are defined in no small part by the complexity of our social lives, and the cognitive mechanisms we possess for making sense of our social worlds. These capacities support unique forms of communication, cooperation, and culture. But how did they evolve, and to what extent do they rely on language or other uniquely human representational machinery? To address these questions, I will explore the social lives of our closest relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, and present a number of controlled experiments probing their cognition. These studies reveal that other apes gather a diversity of knowledge about their social worlds, and share with humans numerous capacities for tracking and predicting the behavior of their groupmates. These rich foundations of human social intelligence therefore can operate in the absence of language, and very likely evolved at least 6-9 million years ago in the ancestors we share with other apes.
00:00 CMBC Introduction by Dietrich Stout
04:11 Speaker Introduction by Dietrich Stout
05:44 Lecture by Chris Krupenye
01:00:11 Q&A session
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NOTE: The views and opinions expressed by the speaker do not necessarily reflect those held by the Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture or Emory University.
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