WORKSHOP
Tuesday, March 11
"Forty years of ape communication. What have we learned about
the evolution of language?". More
info.
REGULAR CONFERENCE
Detailed program
(pdf file).
Wednesday, March 12
14:30 Registration
16:15 Opening address
16:30 Plenary speaker 1: Gary Marcus
17:30 Plenary speaker 2: Camilo José Cela-Conde
18:30 Break
18:45 Welcome buffet
Thursday, March 13
9:00 Plenary Speaker 3: Simon Kirby
10:00 Plenary Speaker 4: Susan Goldin Meadow
11:00 Coffee Break
11:30 Parallel sessions*
13:30 Lunch
15:00 Parallel sessions*
16:30 Coffee Break
17:00 Plenary speaker 5: Juan Uriagereka
18:00 Parallel sessions*
Friday, March 14
9:00 Plenary speaker 6: Rudolf Botha
10:00 Plenary speaker 7: Friedemann Pulvermüller*
11:00 Coffee Break
11:30 Parallel sessions*
13:30 Lunch
15:00 Parallel sessions*
16:30 Coffee Break
17:00 Parallel sessions*
20:30 Dinner
Saturday, March 15
9:00 Plenary speaker 8: Francesco d'Errico
10:00 Plenary speaker 9: Derek Bickerton
11:00 Coffee Break
11:30 Parallel sessions*
13:30 Lunch
15:00 General discussion and conclusion
16:00 End
(*) During the parallel sessions, the accepted contributions
will be presented as talks of 30 min.

Workshop - March 11 (Tuesday)
Detailed program
(pdf file) of the workshop and the regular conference.
Forty years of ape communication
What have we learned about the evolution of language?
In 1969, R. Allen and Beatrix T. Gardner published the first account
of sign language-acquisition in a chimpanzee. This seminal paper
stimulated subsequent ape language studies using other alternative
communication systems including token use and visual graphic symbols.
These reports set the stage for a long-standing debate that continues
today over if and to what extent nonhuman apes are capable of human
language. Over the past few decades the focus has shifted to ethologically
based studies of the communicative and cognitive abilities of apes
in both captive and wild environments. In many ways, there are significant
parallels in the scientific questions that were addressed by these
early ape-language studies and current approaches. These include
questions regarding intentionality, function, the social use of
communicative signals and, perhaps most notably, the relevance of
these findings to the origin of human language. As the "ape-language"
studies approach 40 years of serious scientific inquiry, it is time
to take stock of the available data in this unique area of research.
This symposium will include presentations from researchers who conducted
seminal work on the capacity of apes to acquire elements of non-human
language as well as those who have made considerable recent contributions
to what we know about ape communicative competencies in both captive
and wild settings. A common theme will be to explore what is known
and what remains unknown regarding ape communicative abilities,
and what these data can tell us about the evolution of human language.
Invited speakers
Duane
Rumbaugh (Great Ape Trust of Iowa)
William Hopkins (Agnes Scott College & Yerkes National Primate Research Center)
Dave
Leavens (University of Sussex)
Simone
Pika (University of Manchester)
Katie
Slocombe (University of York)
Jim Hurford (University of Edinburgh)
Program
9:00 Registration (workshop and/or regular conference)
10:00 Welcome (Ramon Ferrer i Cancho)
10:10 Introduction (Jared Taglialatela)
10:30The language skills of apes and how they are acquired, Duane Rumbaugh (Great Ape Trust of Iowa)
11:20 Pointing towards Language, Dave Leavens (University of Sussex)
12:10 Natural vocal communication in chimpanzees: current and future focuses, Katie Slocombe (University of York)
13:00 Lunch
14:30 Our gesturing cousins: insights from their natural gestural
communication, Simone Pika (University of Manchester)
15:20 Do chimpanzees have a "language-ready"" brain? Some new thoughts (and data) on some old ideas, William Hopkins (Agnes Scott College & Yerkes National Primate Research Center)
16:10 Comments by Jim Hurford (University of Edinburgh)
17:00 End
This workshop is organized by Jared
Taglialatela and Ramon
Ferrer i Cancho.
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