π£π£π£Job alert Multimodal Language Department Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics MAX PLANCK RESEARCH GROUP LEADER POSITION (W2 BBESG) lnkd.in/eaq5MW9a
@ybecker
PhD | Freezing in fantastic Leipzig (@mpicbs.bsky.social, former @FriedericiLab; now in Cognitive Neurogenetics @sofievalk.bsky.social). Interested in language and primate brain evolution | neuroanatomy | art | music yannickbecker.weebly.com
π£π£π£Job alert Multimodal Language Department Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics MAX PLANCK RESEARCH GROUP LEADER POSITION (W2 BBESG) lnkd.in/eaq5MW9a
Thank you Simon!
Looking for a Postdoc position and have a background in bioacoustics and animal cognition? Interested in whether other animals might have something akin to language? Join our team: www.oeaw.ac.at/en/oeaw-home...
Super proud of this fabulous team for challenging old comparative frameworks and rethinking what makes language language.
Read more in the thread below π or here ππ: www.cell.com/trends/cogni...
π¨JOB ALERT! π¨
The Department of Anthropology, Hirszfeld Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy in WrocΕaw, Poland is looking for a Postdoc in the project "The human white sclera: the role of colouration and contrast in perceiving the eyes of others."
Please Share!
π’ 2 PhD positions (E13 TV-L, 75%) in our DFG-funded project on great ape communication & the evolution of common ground!
π§ Backgrounds in biology, psychology or linguistics welcome.
ποΈ Deadline: Aug 13
π bit.ly/4l8p7hy & bit.ly/46jcfAq
Please share!
@elmanubohn.bsky.social @meanwhileina.bsky.social
If you want to learn more, I'm presenting this study tomorrow Fri 16th of May ~10:30am at the Neuro-primatology symposium #neurofrance2025 @socneuro.bsky.social
10/n
π Read the press release: www.cbs.mpg.de/2358103/2025...
With amazing co-authors and funders (here online): @alfredanwander.bsky.social @tozbu.bsky.social @taichimpproject.bsky.social @awi.de @maxplanck.de @mpicbs.bsky.social @natureportfolio.nature.com @fondationfyssen.bsky.social
9/n
Huge kudos to the EBC Consortium behind this workβsourcing naturally or unavoidably deceased primates from the field all across Africa, from sanctuaries and from zoos all across Europe.
The future of language research lies in both the lab and the wild.
π§ͺπΏ
8/n
Bonus: Chimp communication already shows structure, combinations, and even some syntax-like patterns. See super recent example: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
The long AF may support this, making it a bridge between gesture, vocalisation, and early language.
7/n
Bottom line?
The neural scaffolding for language likely existed in the last common ancestor of humans and chimps, ~7 million years ago.
6/n
Lateralisation matters too.
Most chimps (esp. zoo-housed) showed left-hemisphere dominance for AF-MTG, just like us.
Wild chimps had more variationβhinting at environmental influence on brain plasticity. ππ§
5/n
Key finding:
πΉ In humans, AF-MTG is stronger than AF-STG
πΉ In chimps, itβs the oppositeβAF-STG dominates
β Suggests evolutionary strengthening of a pre-existing pathway, not a brand-new invention.
4/n
The AF-MTG connection in chimps is weaker than in humans but present in all tested brains.
And that changes everything.
Language wiring didnβt appear out of nowhereβit evolved gradually. π§¬
3/n
But in our new study, using ultra-high-res diffusion MRI (500ΞΌm), we found AF-MTG connections consistent in both wild and captive chimpanzees.
2/n
The arcuate fascicle (AF) is a key brain tract linking language areas in humans, especially Brocaβs area with the middle temporal gyrus (MTG), vital for syntax and semantics.
Until now, AF-MTG connection was thought to be human-only. π€―
Portrait of the chimpanzee βWazakβ (Β©James Mollison) & Nerve fibres in the chimpanzee brain (Β©MPI CBS) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-59254-8
π¨ Language connection FOUND in chimpanzees? π§ π£οΈ
For years, scientists thought the key to human language was a fibre connection, missing in chimp brains.
New high-res brain scans just changed the game. ππ
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
#Neuroscience #LanguageEvolution #Chimpanzees
1/n π§΅π
It turns out that AF is indeed linked to communication (vocal AND gestural)!!!
Great that parts of this project are finally seeing the light of day.
thanks to Adrien Meguerditchian and @erc.europa.eu, @ilcb.bsky.social, @neuromarseille.bsky.social, @fondationfyssen.bsky.social for the support!
Indeed for some reason I got hooked by the arcuate fascicle (or fasciculus). And Erin across the ocean knew about tractography in chimpanzees! At the same time, Bill Hopkins had behavioural data on the same chimpanzees! And Suhas was an incredible help!
Hey Arcuate freaks and geeks!
I first contacted Erin in 2019. I was working on my PhD in France on communication correlates of homologous language regions in primates. But what about their interconnections?
The article: rdcu.be/eifzU
Exciting! @evfedorenko.bsky.social and coll. @natureportfolio.bsky.social (NatRevNeurosci)'s piece functionally separated a core lang network from a percept.-motor network (+others);
and asked for an evo perspective!
Here we go: s.gwdg.de/WUPS8h
(together with A.D. Friederici)