HUMANS understand chimps’ sign language, scientists say.
We still have ancient instincts that help us read hand gestures used by our ancestors before we evolved to speak.
![Humans understand chimps’ sign language, scientists reveal Humans understand chimps’ sign language, scientists reveal](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/NINTCHDBPICT000790861739.jpg?strip=all&w=639)
Humans understand chimps’ sign language[/caption]
Apes including chimpanzees, orangutans and bonobos still use the same signs to communicate.
A study by the University of St Andrews in Scotland showed videos of 100 ape gestures to 5,656 people.
Volunteers correctly worked out the meaning more than half the time — more than they could have guessed at random.
Three quarters of people correctly guessed that a big chest scratch meant “groom me”.
When a chimp touched another one’s mouth or tapped them, 79 per cent knew it meant “give me that food”.
Two thirds knew a gentle shove by a chimp or bonobo was an instruction to move or climb on to their back.
Study author and chimp expert Dr Cat Hobaiter said: “We can decode these gestures almost instinctively — it’s a useful reminder that we are also great apes.
“Even though modern humans have language, we’ve kept some understanding of our shared ancestral system of ape communication.”