How do humans perceive, think, feel, decide, and act? How do they interact with their environments and others? How do these abilities develop and decline over the lifespan? How do they evolve and compare with other species? How do they vary among individuals, groups, and cultures? How ...
Cortical networks for the production of spoken language in humans are organized by phonetic features1,2, such as articulatory parameters3,4 and vocal pitch5,6. Previous research has failed to find an equivalent forebrain representation in other species7
"No obvious deformation has been found. It is in very good condition and features the typical characteristics ofHomo erectus," Gao said, referring to an extinct species of the human genus that is perhaps an ancestor of...
other undamaged human infants, a capacity to learn language. For this reason, biologists now suggest that language be “ species specific” to the human race, __8__ that is to say, they consider the human infant to be genetic programmed in __9__ such way that it can acquire language....
D. It finds new similarities between humans and chimpanzees.29. What do the scientists think is key to human evolution? A. The DNA sequence in humans. B. Gene regulation in the human brain. C. The challenging tasks facing humans. D. Communication between humans and other species.30. How ...
Bothantsandhumanbeingsrespondtoisolationinsimilarways.Inisolatedindividualsofbothspecies,researchershaveobservedthattheimmunesystemislessefficient.Humansandothersocialmammalswillexperiencehighlevelsofstresswhentheyareisolatedfromthegroup,whichhasanegativeeffectonbothwell-beingandphysicalhealth.Isolatedpeopletendtobecomeanxious,...
, ecological interconnectedness, and material makeup as other species, we are not the same as them. At a minimum – that is, even if we do not have special souls or unique places in the great chain of being – we are a unique form of life (we are, after all, a distinct species)...
Also, the finding could shed light on other roles played by these enzymes which are found not only in the gut but the salivary glands, the pancreas and the lungs, where they may be involved in asthma.
and between history and ratio of demonstrators in the model, because we hypothesised that how dogs interact with humans/demonstrators could affect their behaviour. In addition, we also examined all the other first-order interactions between familiarity, history, ratio, and other variables. The dog’...
When an infectious agent responsible for a human disease is also capable of infecting other species, these species may act as reservoirs or vectors for the disease (European Commission, 2011). Arthropods, for example, transmit hundreds of different known infectious and parasitic agents to humans and...