The Applied Evolutionary Epistemology Lab of the Centre for Philosophy of  
Science of the University of Lisbon is pleased to announce the publication of  
the 1st Volume in the New Springer Book Series Interdisciplinary Evolution  
Research.
 
THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL COMMUNICATION IN PRIMATES: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY  APPROACH
Edited by Marco Pina & Nathalie Gontier
Book Abstract: How did social communication evolve in primates? In this  
volume, primatologists, linguists, anthropologists, cognitive scientists and  
philosophers of science systematically analyze how their specific disciplines  
demarcate the research questions and methodologies involved in the study of the 
 evolutionary origins of social communication in primates in general, and in  
humans in particular. In the first part of the book, historians and 
philosophers  of science address how the epistemological frameworks associated 
with primate  communication and language evolution studies have changed over 
time, and how  these conceptual changes affect our current studies on the 
subject matter. In  the second part, scholars provide cutting-edge insights 
into the various means  through which primates communicate socially in both 
natural and experimental  settings. They examine the behavioral building blocks 
by which primates  communicate, and they analyze what the cognitive 
requirements are for displaying  communicative acts. Chapters highlight 
cross-fostering and language experiments  with primates, primate mother-infant 
communication, the display of emotions and  expressions, manual gestures and 
vocal signals, joint attention, intentionality  and theory of mind. The primary 
focus of the third part is on how these various  types of communicative 
behavior possibly evolved, and how they can be understood  as evolutionary 
precursors to human language.  Leading scholars analyze how both  manual and 
vocal gestures gave way to mimetic and imitational protolanguage, and  how the 
latter possibly transitioned into human language. In the final part, we  turn 
to the hominin lineage, and anthropologists, archeologists and linguists  
investigate what the necessary neurocognitive, anatomical and behavioral  
features are in order for human language to evolve, and how language differs  
from other forms of primate communication.
Table of Contents: 
http://www.springer.com/life+sciences/evolutionary+%26+developmental+biology/book/978-3-319-02668-8
 
 
ABOUT THE SERIES INTERDISCIPLINARY EVOLUTION RESEARCH
Website: http://www.springer.com/series/13109
 
FORTHCOMING ANTHOLOGIES (to appear in Fall & Winter 2014):
Macroevolution: Explanation, Interpretation, Evidence, Emanuele Serrelli  & 
Nathalie Gontier (eds)
Reticulate Evolution: Symbiogenesis and Horizontal Gene Transfer, Nathalie  
Gontier (ed)
Cultural Phylogenetics: Concepts and Applications in Archaeology and  
Anthropology, Larissa Mendoza Straffon (ed)
 
INTERESTED IN EDITING AN ANTHOLOGY FOR THE SERIES?
Contact Nathalie Gontier at [email protected]. Kindly note that the series 
does not publish monographs.
 
More on AppEEL:
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