Researchers discover surprising similarity in how humans and great apes giggle reflecting ties to common ancestors: study

NEW YORK (AP) — 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 laughter sounds.

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.

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“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 studie...

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Publisher: New York Post

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