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Learning from communication versus observation in great apes
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Context, not sequence order, affects the meaning of bonobo (Pan paniscus) gestures
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Bo-NO-bouba-kiki : picture-word mapping but no spontaneous sound symbolic speech-shape mapping in a language trained bonobo
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Collective knowledge and the dynamics of culture in chimpanzees
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Chimpanzees combine pant hoots with food calls into larger structures
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The vocal repertoire of pale spear-nosed bats in a social roosting context
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Chimpanzee lip-smacks confirm primate continuity for speech-rhythm evolution
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Chestnut-crowned babbler calls are composed of meaningless shared building blocks
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Bonobo and chimpanzee gestures overlap extensively in meaning
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Cumulative culture in nonhumans : overlooked findings from Japanese monkeys?
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Speech-like rhythm in a voiced and voiceless orangutan call
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A gestural repertoire of 1-2year old human children : in search of the ape gestures
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Internal acoustic structuring in pied babbler recruitment cries specifies the form of recruitment
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Sensitivity to relational similarity and object similarity in apes and children
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Zoonotic diagrams : mastering and unsettling human-animal relations
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Abstract:
Research leading to this article was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant (under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme ERC grant agreement no. 336564) for the project ‘Visual Representations of the Third Plague Pandemic’ at the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities of the University of Cambridge. ; This article approaches interspecies relations through an examination of the prevalent visual device employed in the representation of animal-human infection in the life sciences: the zoonotic cycles diagram. After charting its emergence and development in the context of bubonic plague, I explore how this diagrammatic regime has been applied in two distinct practical contexts: a plague warning sign on the Grand Canyon National Park hiking trail; and the on-line public information campaign launched by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the wake of the Ebola outbreak of 2014-16. The article demonstrates the principal ontological and biopolitical operations of these diagrams, arguing that, far from simply summarizing epidemiological narratives of animal-human infection, they function both as pilots of human mastery over human-animal relations and as crucial sites of unsettlement for the latter. ; Publisher PDF ; Peer reviewed
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Keyword:
BDC; GN; GN Anthropology; H; H Social Sciences; QL; QL Zoology; T-NDAS
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/11808 https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.12649
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Titi semantics : context and meaning in Titi monkey call sequences
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