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1 ral variants (96% novel) and identify 17,000 ape-specific structural variants (ASSVs) based on compar
4 ance appearing very similar to that of adult apes in tasks of physical (quantities, and causality) an
9 Ma) is crucial to the elucidation of African ape and human origins, but few fossil assemblages of thi
10 r bouts of positive selection in the African ape lineage, suggestive of a gene undergoing strong adap
20 as in most humans, or 13 as in most African apes, and where the position of the thoracolumbar transi
25 ction in Ar. ramidus relative to the African apes is consistent with hypotheses of increased propulsi
29 s (great apes and humans), or hominoids (all apes and humans), which is needed to evaluate numerous p
30 ated and fully extended forelimbs, as in all apes (hominoids), Danuvius combines the adaptations of b
32 sociated with these rearrangements map to an ape-specific interchromosomal core duplicon that cluster
34 an lineage, but direct measures of human and ape metabolism are needed to compare evolved energy stra
36 tial evidence suggested that only humans and apes can successfully learn RMTS with pairs of sample an
37 a parasite lineage that infected humans and apes in Africa before the Duffy-negative mutation elimin
39 g meiotic recombination hotspots in mice and apes, but it appears to be absent from other vertebrate
42 onkeys (OWMs), New World Monkeys (NWMs), and apes, focusing on putatively neutral autosomal sites and
44 re given to (a) whether nonhuman great apes (apes) also have evolved imitation (answer: no); (b) whet
45 ogical reasoning in a nonprimate species, as apes alone have spontaneously exhibited RMTS behavior af
46 hermore, studies of WMICs in species such as apes provide a crucial phylogenetic context for understa
48 puzzle, suggesting a divergence time between apes and Old World monkeys of 65 million years, too old
50 ion differences and suggest that the broader ape expression pattern arose due to mutational changes t
51 recognised among early Miocene catarrhines (apes, Old World monkeys, and their extinct relatives).
52 s identity, and posit expression of derived, ape-like features as a criterion for distinguishing this
53 iens, although less so than highly dimorphic apes, suggesting that the Ileret footprints offer a uniq
55 stem hominoids close to the origin of extant apes, and that hylobatid-like facial features evolved mu
58 s (monkeys, apes and humans) and two extinct apes (Oreopithecus and Australopithecus) as captured by
59 the, to our knowledge, most complete fossil ape cranium yet described, recovered from the 13 million
69 in-1 variants to promote the modified gibbon ape leukemia virus glycoprotein-pseudotyped lentiviral v
71 G is a close relative of KoRV and the gibbon ape leukemia virus (GALV), with virion morphology and Mn
74 equence capture and read mapping in 19 great ape males, combining the data with sequences extracted f
75 capacity for vocal fold exercise in a great ape (i) in real-time, (ii) up and down the frequency spe
77 nd interactive vocal fold control in a great ape during an imitation "do-as-I-do" game with a human d
78 e 11.62-million-year-old Danuvius is a great ape that is dentally most similar to Dryopithecus and ot
79 C haplotypes of humans and the African great ape species have one copy of the MHC-A, -B, and -C genes
80 sity of these viruses in seven African great ape taxa, we show that they exhibit very strong host spe
81 l fashion [6-8], replicated across all great ape species in captivity [9-17] and chimpanzees in the w
83 on to more ubiquitous expression among great ape tissues when compared to Old World and New World mon
84 aration has never been reported in any great ape species, despite their complex societies and advance
85 apes but also human populations around great ape habitats, bringing health benefits to both humans an
86 HC haplotypes of orangutans, the Asian great ape species, exhibit variation in the number of gene cop
87 ment self-medication in the only Asian great ape, orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus), and for the first tim
92 Mountain gorillas are an endangered great ape subspecies and a prominent focus for conservation, y
96 e distribution of genetic diversity in great ape species is likely to have been affected by patterns
97 mine arguably the most complex call in great ape vocal communication, the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes
98 nimal communication systems, including great ape vocalization, where extensive study has produced mea
99 rmation for human disease in a natural great ape setting and have potential conservation implications
100 Rs in a panel of 83 human and nonhuman great ape genomes, in a total of six different species, and st
104 senting the earliest known instance of great ape-like wrist morphology and supporting the presence of
105 ts evolutionary relationships to other great ape species, and the divergence of these species during
107 ber (n = 1,069) of previously reported great ape inversions by using single-cell DNA template strand
108 ross anthropoid primates and find that great ape and human prefrontal cortex expansion are non-allome
109 Pan Furthermore, we inferred that the great ape common ancestor already possessed multicopy sequence
113 of malaria parasites infecting African great apes (subgenus Laverania) and their strong host specific
122 per divergence estimates of humans and great apes based on lower mutation rates of ~0.5 x 10(-9) per
123 The results indicate that humans and great apes differ from monkeys in having a preponderance of mu
124 the similarities between cetaceans and great apes in the nature of the transmission of cultural behav
125 lyzing 65 GP sequences from humans and great apes over diverse locations across epidemic waves betwee
126 in generating inversions in humans and great apes, creating architectures that nowadays predispose th
128 tressed others is common in humans and great apes, yet our ability to explore the biological mechanis
132 ngutans (genus: Pongo), the only Asian great apes and phylogenetically our most distant relatives amo
134 cognitive performance is paralleled by great apes in many tasks dealing with the physical world.
139 ion for torso stiffness seen in extant great apes (i.e., living members of the Hominidae), and is mor
143 could be used to vaccinate habituated great apes but also human populations around great ape habitat
144 ) of humans and chimpanzees, hominids (great apes and humans), or hominoids (all apes and humans), wh
146 togenesis have likely had in hominids (great apes), considering a model that approximates features of
150 much greater than observed in humans, great apes, and the neo-X chromosome of Drosophila miranda, wh
151 pedalism in hominins and suspension in great apes (hominids); however, fossil evidence has been lacki
153 ined full-body rhythmic entrainment in great apes that could help reconstruct possible proto-stages o
154 obe (often including Heschl's gyrus in great apes) and the posterior dorsal insula, such that a porti
160 wers are given to (a) whether nonhuman great apes (apes) also have evolved imitation (answer: no); (b
163 d choice matching task, humans but not great apes, showed crossmodal sound symbolic congruency effect
164 ent is estimated to lie at the root of great apes ( approximately 19-15 mya), indicating that selecti
167 infants) to show that three species of great apes reliably look in anticipation of an agent acting on
169 is generally considered a motivator of great apes' (including humans) violent intergroup conflict, bu
170 in high concentrations in the serum of great apes, and even higher in some diseases, before the appea
174 ompare simulated sex ratios to data on great apes and human hunter-gatherers, and note associations b
176 n neocortex differs from that of other great apes in several notable regards, including altered cell
181 of the three experiments indicate that great apes can successfully adjust their pointing to the spati
186 ultures and cultural capacities of the great apes have played a leading role in the recognition emerg
187 erviews among people living near these great apes to understand better their feeding habits and habit
190 test variation in the reaction of wild great apes (43 groups of naive chimpanzees, bonobos, and weste
192 n of human respiratory viruses to wild great apes, causing high morbidity and, occasionally, mortalit
197 subset that may contribute to ape- or great-ape-specific phenotypic traits, including taillessness,
198 ut microbiomes have been shaped by our great-ape heritage but also the features that make humans uniq
199 ry (PAB) is well documented in haplorrhines (apes and monkeys) but not in strepsirrhines (lemurs and
200 ates with precise hand grips, such as higher apes, few have considered primates that lack opposition
201 two groups of extant catarrhines-hominoids (apes and humans) and Old World monkeys-and are thus view
203 netic relationships among extinct hominoids (apes and humans) are controversial due to pervasive homo
204 thecoids (Old World monkeys) from hominoids (apes and humans)-is a poorly understood phase in our sha
205 features evolved independently in hominoids (apes) and cercopithecoids and much earlier in the former
208 HIV-1, HIV-2, and SIV Nefs counteract human, ape, monkey, and murine SERINC5 orthologs with similar p
209 codes one of the most rapidly evolving human-ape gene families, nuclear pore interacting protein (NPI
212 e role played by small-bodied catarrhines in ape evolution and provides key insight into the last com
214 unication, cognition and social behaviour in apes at the University of St Andrews and through field s
220 this fusion in 56 primate species (including apes, Old World monkeys, New World monkeys, and strepsir
224 mans are distinguished from the other living apes in having larger brains and an unusual life history
226 ages: occurring at least once in marsupials, apes, and cattle, and at least twice in rodents and marm
229 sample of fossil primates including Miocene apes from Africa, Europe, and Asia to test alternative h
232 r morphology of extant anthropoids (monkeys, apes and humans) and two extinct apes (Oreopithecus and
236 that are shared between humans and nonhuman apes, whereas there is little evidence that other apes e
237 s rare among primates and absent in nonhuman apes and because emergent provisioning would have been s
239 In addition, comparative studies of nonhuman apes also highlight important differences between these
241 exhibits a pattern more similar to nonhuman apes, potentially suggesting regular bouts of both climb
244 We apply our algorithm to two clades of apes and flies to characterize possible sources of infea
246 been characterized in only a small number of apes and no publication to date has examined the degree
249 ext so that the default pointing response of apes would have indicated an undesired object, either du
250 are already present in the 17- to 18-Myr-old ape Proconsul these features evolved independently in ho
252 Further, similar to recent results in other ape species, but in contrast to many human self-reported
256 whereas there is little evidence that other apes exhibit comparable capacities for distributing bene
259 s of these resurrected enzymes show that our ape ancestors gained a digestive dehydrogenase enzyme ca
260 an fifteen years of existence, the R package ape has continuously grown its contents, and has been us
263 fe, including fossils like the plesiomorphic ape Proconsul heseloni and the hominins Ardipithecus ram
265 earliest hominins were bipedal but retained ape-like features in the hind limb that would have limit
266 alian cells, worms, flies, rodents, simians, apes, and even humans, all indicate declining adaptive h
268 fferent time points after the split of small apes from great apes, and their combined sequence is uni
269 smission can kickstart subsequent and stable ape cultural evolutionary psychology ("CEP"; answer: unl
271 nes the adaptations of bipeds and suspensory apes, and provides a model for the common ancestor of gr
274 cal communicative split of hominins from the ape background may thus have been copious, functionally
275 and synteny in Plasmodium gaboni, one of the ape Laverania species most distantly related to P. falci
276 ns of SIVcpz and SIVgor, which represent the ape precursors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (H
279 ly believes an object to be, even though the apes themselves know that the object is no longer there.
280 re notable for many reasons, including their ape-sized brains, their adaptation to a coastal niche th
283 ultural phenomena pervade the lives of these apes, with potentially major implications for their broa
286 characterize a subset that may contribute to ape- or great-ape-specific phenotypic traits, including
287 humans can transmit imitation as a gadget to apes (answer: yes, partly); (c) whether human-to-ape tra
289 collaborative abilities are not specific to apes and may be more closely linked to ecological need [
291 (answer: yes, partly); (c) whether human-to-ape transmission can kickstart subsequent and stable ape
292 ontaneous whole-body entrainment between two ape peers, thus providing tentative empirical evidence f
293 a domain-general cognitive process underlies ape metacognition one needs to show that selective infor
294 in ChIP-seq predicted enhancer regions where apes and macaque show diverged enhancer activity and gen
299 pecies of Anopheles were found infected with ape Plasmodium: Anopheles vinckei, Anopheles moucheti, a