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5 results for "chimpanzee"

Z_3_04 Molecular Biology

Z_3_04 — Comparative Genomics and Cross-Species Analysis

Comparative genomics — the systematic comparison of genome sequences across species — has become the primary tool for understanding genome evolution, identifying functionally important sequences, and reconstructing the T

comparative genomics genome sequencing synteny ortholog paralog conserved element
ZB_1_09 Ecology & Biology

ZB_1_09 — Tool Use in Animals

Tool use — defined as the deployment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human. Since Jane Goodall's 1960 observation of chimpanzee

tool use animal cognition crow New Caledonian crow chimpanzee orangutan
R_2_12 Verified Biology & Evolution

R_2_12 — Tool Use in Animals: Corvids, Primates, Dolphins, and Cognitive Evolution

Tool use — the employment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human, a defining cognitive threshold separating Homo sapiens from al

tool use animal cognition New Caledonian crow chimpanzee dolphin sea otter
R_2_10 Biology & Evolution

R_2_10 — Primate Evolution and the Hominid Lineage

The order Primates, originating ~65–80 million years ago, encompasses prosimians (lemurs, tarsiers), monkeys, and apes. The human lineage (Hominini) diverged from the chimpanzee lineage ~6–7 Mya, based on molecular clock

primate hominid hominini great ape human evolution bipedalism
R_2_09 Biology & Evolution

R_2_09 — Self-Domestication Hypothesis — Did Humans Tame Themselves?

The human self-domestication hypothesis proposes that Homo sapiens underwent a domestication process analogous to that of dogs, livestock, and Belyaev's experimentally domesticated foxes — but without an external domesti

self-domestication Brian Hare cranial globularization reduced brow ridge sexual dimorphism neural crest cells