Study Traces Laughter's Evolution from Apes to Humans, Revealing Ancient Rhythms

June 25, 2026
Study Traces Laughter's Evolution from Apes to Humans, Revealing Ancient Rhythms
  • A new study analyzes laughter in humans and great apes to explore evolutionary origins of giggling, suggesting a common ancestor dating back about 15 million years and examining whether it follows similar rhythmic patterns.

  • Human laughter retains a conserved rhythm but is faster, more variable, and governed by sophisticated context-dependent cognitive control that enables different social meanings and intents.

  • Rhythmic structure analyses showed significant isochrony peaks, with context-specific differences; tickling exhibited clearer isochrony than play across species.

  • The study and its reporting are supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, with AP responsible for content.

  • Researchers recorded laughter from four orangutans, two gorillas, three bonobos, four chimpanzees, and four human children (ages 6 months to 7 years) in two settings: regular play and tickling.

  • The research was conducted at the University of Warwick and published in Communications Biology, with authors Chiara De Gregorio, Marina Davila-Ross, and Adriano R. Lameira.

  • Findings contribute to understanding how timing and vocal-cord modulation evolved and laid groundwork for the emergence of complex spoken language.

  • Ethical considerations note data collected from non-human primates across multiple institutions (2004–2006) and human infant recordings with parental consent, all procedures adhering to regulations.

  • Methodology included extensive tempo variability analysis, tk and rk measurements, and phylogenetically informed mixed models; data and scripts are publicly available on Zenodo.

  • The study reinforces a link between human and nonhuman primate communication while highlighting distinct evolutionary paths for speech and language.

  • Experts interpret the results as evidence of advanced vocal motor control in great apes and humans, informing the evolution of vocal flexibility in the primate lineage.

  • Key expert perspectives suggest laughter offers an evolutionary window into pre-speech vocal transformations, supporting a gradual continuum rather than abrupt change.

Summary based on 11 sources


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