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1 t and modern humans, Neanderthals and a wild chimpanzee.
2 ature for over 15000 protein-coding genes in chimpanzee.
3 nt stem cell-derived cerebral organoids from chimpanzee.
4 ly and obliquely, only the former existed in chimpanzees.
5 on of shorter vocal folds in bonobos than in chimpanzees.
6 xic stress is highly conserved in humans and chimpanzees.
7 relates in the production of these sounds in chimpanzees.
8 t range and robustly infects only humans and chimpanzees.
9 most well-established cultural traditions in chimpanzees.
10 dominance rank and reproductive success than chimpanzees.
11  during natural intergroup conflicts in wild chimpanzees.
12 g characteristics of social learning in wild chimpanzees.
13 l correlates of mutual eye gaze variation in chimpanzees.
14 ans, we show that the MFS is also present in chimpanzees.
15 f mutual eye gaze variation in adult captive chimpanzees.
16 ability is generally conserved in humans and chimpanzees.
17 an social aging in longitudinal data on wild chimpanzees.
18 ndard human image preprocessing framework in chimpanzees.
19 tive skew should be lower in bonobos than in chimpanzees [1].
20 suspensory quadruped (most similar to extant chimpanzees)(1).
21 variation in the FOXP2 coding sequence in 63 chimpanzees, 11 bonobos, 48 gorillas, 37 orangutans and
22 oming-handclasp style preferences in captive chimpanzees [2], we tested the alternative view posed by
23         5GHPV3 was delivered by plasmid DNA, chimpanzee adenovirus (ChAdOx1) and modified vaccinia An
24 ed, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial of the chimpanzee adenovirus 3 vaccine (ChAd3-EBO-Z) and the re
25 ologous prime-boost regimen with recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus type 3 vectored Ebola Zaire vaccin
26  vaccinated with the Ebola vaccine candidate chimpanzee adenovirus type 3-vectored Ebola Zaire vaccin
27          A replication-defective recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus type 3-vectored ebolavirus vaccine
28 led trial in five trial sites in the UK of a chimpanzee adenovirus-vectored vaccine (ChAdOx1 nCoV-19)
29    We evaluated the protective activity of a chimpanzee adenovirus-vectored vaccine encoding a prefus
30 tory mucosal therapeutic delivery of a novel chimpanzee adenovirus-vectored vaccine expressing Ag85A
31  have reported the immunogenicity of a novel chimpanzee adenovirus-vectored vaccine, ChAdOx1 nCoV-19
32 nst RSV (ChAd155-RSV) using the viral vector chimpanzee-adenovirus-155, encoding RSV fusion (F), nucl
33  step width or pelvic list to mimic those of chimpanzees affects hip adduction, but neither of these
34 nts, CD4 diversity is maintained, protecting chimpanzees against infection with SIVcpz and other SIVs
35 e, we profile the gut microbiota of 166 wild chimpanzees aged 8 months to 67 years in the Kibale Nati
36  callosum from T1-weighted MRI data from 213 chimpanzees, aged between 9 and 54 years.
37                                          The chimpanzee aging trajectory compared with the human traj
38                                   One of six chimpanzees also successfully paired objects according t
39 o engage in such food transfer (particularly chimpanzees), although they share many social-cognitive
40 t comprehensive map of MEIs to date spanning chimpanzees, ancient hominids, and modern humans and rev
41 stent with co-divergence with their gorilla, chimpanzee and bonobo hosts, suggesting a timescale for
42  we found that the genus Pan, which includes chimpanzee and bonobo, experienced accelerated substitut
43 uivalent activity to human A3C I188 and that chimpanzee and gorilla A3C form dimers at the same inter
44        Nonetheless, here we demonstrate that chimpanzee and gorilla A3C have approximately equivalent
45 oot of Ar. ramidus is most similar to living chimpanzee and gorilla species among a large sample of a
46  to humans and some nonhuman primates (e.g., chimpanzee and gorilla).
47 contrasted the connectome layout between the chimpanzee and human brain and compared differences with
48 r layer, granular layer, and white matter in chimpanzee and macaque cerebellum slices.
49 arisons of brain connectivity across humans, chimpanzee and macaques further suggest that features of
50 van genomes, as well as reference genomes of Chimpanzee and Rhesus Macaque.
51 lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from human, chimpanzee and rhesus, and we identify patterns of m(6)A
52 g and cortical surface reconstructions in 30 chimpanzees and 30 humans, we show that the MFS is also
53 differences in oral microbiome phyla between chimpanzees and anatomically modern humans (AMH), with c
54 Project, we also used it to discover MEIs in chimpanzees and ancient (Neanderthal and Denisovan) homi
55 rangutans, eastern and western gorillas, and chimpanzees and bonobos [1].
56                                              Chimpanzees and bonobos are highly capable of tracking o
57 neural progenitor cells compared to those of chimpanzees and bonobos both in vitro and in vivo, sugge
58 ese findings demonstrate experimentally that chimpanzees and bonobos can take into account what other
59 rted simian AdV (SAdV) genomes isolated from chimpanzees and bonobos.
60  absence/presence differences between common chimpanzees and bonobos.
61        Here we investigate the strategies of chimpanzees and children in a limited resource problem.
62 idual is indistinguishable from that of wild chimpanzees and distinct from humans.
63 was previously shown by our group to protect chimpanzees and generate broad cross-neutralizing antibo
64 illas in southeastern Cameroon and sympatric chimpanzees and gorillas in a European zoo.
65 estinal microbiota of free-ranging sympatric chimpanzees and gorillas in southeastern Cameroon and sy
66                                              Chimpanzees and gorillas, when not inactive, engage prim
67 by Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium genera in chimpanzees and Haemophilus and Streptococcus in AMH.
68               Interferon (IFN)-alpha treated chimpanzees and hepatitis C patients showed elevated APO
69 able estimates of heterozygosity for humans, chimpanzees and horses.
70                                              Chimpanzees and humans develop skills through the experi
71   Therefore, DP(84Gly), found only in common chimpanzees and humans, uniquely uses both class I and I
72 ements showing accelerated evolution between chimpanzees and humans.
73  difference in corpus callosum morphology of chimpanzees and humans.
74 gh OPRM1 cerebellar expression in humans and chimpanzees and low expression in macaques.
75 der cognitive networks in humans compared to chimpanzees and macaques and that genes with high expres
76 wo variable polyglutamine microsatellites in chimpanzees and orangutans and found three nonsynonymous
77 ential early-life gut microbial diversity in chimpanzees and other primates will illuminate the life
78 er of a lentivirus from monkey reservoirs to chimpanzees and subsequently to humans, which gave rise
79 strate a unique pattern of cortical aging in chimpanzees and suggest that inflammatory processes may
80 he likely size of the ancestor of humans and chimpanzees and the evolutionary history of selection on
81 idual differences in the use of AG sounds by chimpanzees and, here, we examined whether changes in co
82 fections of hosts from three species (human, chimpanzee, and bonobo).
83 ecombination events from three hosts: human, chimpanzee, and bonobo.
84 gned them with the publicly available human, chimpanzee, and gorilla Y assemblies.
85 in, which is broadly conserved among bonobo, chimpanzee, and gorilla.
86 ges in connectivity patterns across macaque, chimpanzee, and human.
87 ome sequencing of 16 regions of adult human, chimpanzee, and macaque brains.
88 es of cerebral organoids derived from human, chimpanzee, and macaque stem cells.
89 eurons and GABAergic interneurons, in human, chimpanzee, and rhesus macaque.
90 e isocortex in 13 primates, including human, chimpanzee, and various Old World and New World monkeys.
91  relative contrast with the iris in bonobos, chimpanzees, and humans.
92                                     Notably, chimpanzees, and in particular bonobos, provide a remark
93 ensity for reactive aggression compared with chimpanzees, and in this respect humans are more bonobo-
94 appear to influence mutual eye gaze in adult chimpanzees, and is the first to report neuroanatomical
95 vers, kidneys, hearts, and lungs, in humans, chimpanzees, and rhesus macaques.
96 from postmortem brain regions across humans, chimpanzees, and rhesus macaques.
97                                              Chimpanzees are among the closest living relatives to hu
98                                  Macaques or chimpanzees are frequently used as proxy for human ances
99  to many human self-reported findings, older chimpanzees are less likely to console than are younger
100                                   Humans and chimpanzees are more sensitive to endotoxin than are mic
101 r and Pusey show that dispersal decisions in chimpanzees are most influenced by inbreeding avoidance
102 oposed, however, that in contrast to humans, chimpanzees are only able to do this in competitive inte
103 mans are prone to myocardial ischemia, while chimpanzees are prone to myocardial fibrosis.
104 ted host species tropism and only humans and chimpanzees are susceptible to infection.
105 als, territorial boundary patrolling by male chimpanzees, are consistent with these ideas.
106 os harbour P. gaboni, formerly only found in chimpanzees, as well as a potential new species, Plasmod
107  all-occurrence basis from 18 captive-reared chimpanzees at the Los Angeles Zoo.
108  expression levels in iPSC-CMs in humans and chimpanzees, before and after hypoxia and re-oxygenation
109     While there was substantial variation in chimpanzee behaviour, monopolization was the common cour
110 nformation and debates on whether the common chimpanzee-bonobo divergence is linked to heterochrony.
111                   Moreover, since the common chimpanzee-bonobo split c.2 Ma there have been no change
112 two functional amino acid substitutions from chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas, with an additional fi
113  by analyzing 422 brain samples from humans, chimpanzees, bonobos, and macaques representing 33 anato
114 ction of wild great apes (43 groups of naive chimpanzees, bonobos, and western gorillas across 14 fie
115  model for the last common ancestor (LCA) of chimpanzees/bonobos and humans.
116 patterns of astrocyte activation in the aged chimpanzee brain are distinct from humans.
117 mpanzee Brain Resource (NCBR) to develop the chimpanzee brain reference template Juna.Chimp for spati
118 we use structural MRI data from the National Chimpanzee Brain Resource (NCBR) to develop the chimpanz
119 ay matter atrophy in multiple regions of the chimpanzee brain, as well as, a general rightward asymme
120 plaques and neurofibrillary tangles) in aged chimpanzee brains provided an opportunity to examine the
121 ng tissue-specific expression from human and chimpanzee brains, we identify genes where transcript is
122 ich utilizes Nef, but not Vpu, to antagonize chimpanzee BST-2.
123 or proactive aggression, a trait shared with chimpanzees but not bonobos.
124 ad diverse lineage III KIR that passed on to chimpanzees but not to humans.
125 behavior of our closest animal relative, the chimpanzee, but long-term field studies have since revea
126 at the MFS is not only present in humans and chimpanzees, but also in bonobos, gorillas, orangutans,
127 lities of termite fishing tools used by wild chimpanzees by comparing the neighbouring Kasekela and M
128                    Children and at least one chimpanzee can thus spontaneously sort tools into functi
129 sults suggest that at least in some contexts chimpanzees can exhibit communicative behaviors to susta
130 ulture (CTC), Osiurak and Reynaud argue that chimpanzees can imitate mechanical actions, but do not h
131 hology, namely group hunting practices among chimpanzees, can help the author appreciate the distinct
132  nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) has arisen in chimpanzee CD4 (68T) that creates a second glycosylation
133  50 chimpanzee individuals, we find that all chimpanzee CD4 alleles encode a fixed, chimpanzee-specif
134  addition to an invariant N32 encoded by all chimpanzee CD4 alleles.
135                Thus, all allelic versions of chimpanzee CD4 are singly glycosylated at the virus bind
136 e that substitutions in the D1 domain of the chimpanzee CD4 can prevent SIV cell entry.
137                       Here, we show that the chimpanzee CD4 is highly polymorphic, with nine coding v
138 e thermophoresis to show that the glycans on chimpanzee CD4 reduce binding affinity with the lentivir
139                 Doubly glycosylated forms of chimpanzee CD4 reduce HIV-1 and SIVcpz infection by as m
140 toration of virus infection in cells bearing chimpanzee CD4 requires reversion of both threonines at
141 es there were only four minor changes in the chimpanzee clade, and all were reversions to the ancestr
142  to identify cultural variation among living chimpanzee communities, adding to the growing research o
143                     We used a dataset of 144 chimpanzee communities, with information on 31 behaviors
144  relatively deeper and cortically thinner in chimpanzees compared to humans.
145 mpetitors in the Bonobo condition versus the Chimpanzee condition, suggesting a significant effect of
146 ite fishing as a window into the richness of chimpanzee cultural diversity, we address a potential sa
147              Additionally, we found that the chimpanzee cytomegalovirus UL148 homolog suppresses surf
148 tagenesis and, possibly, by evolution, since chimpanzee cytomegalovirus UL148 retains CD58 but does n
149 white matter atlas, constructed from in vivo chimpanzee diffusion-weighted scans.
150                      However, unlike humans, chimpanzees do not display astrogliosis in other cortica
151 covered that while expression of mouse, rat, chimpanzee, dog, horse, goat, sheep, and human Mxra8 ena
152                                              Chimpanzees engage in some cooperative behaviors in the
153 ing effect on bout length, with human-reared chimpanzees engaging in longer bouts of mutual gaze comp
154 wledge covers hundreds of societies, whereas chimpanzee ethnography encompasses at most 15 communitie
155 een human and gorilla than between human and chimpanzee, even though human and chimpanzee share a mor
156             The brains of humans compared to chimpanzees exhibit a characteristic posterior shift of
157              The collective findings suggest chimpanzees exhibit cortical plasticity in regions of th
158  (Pan troglodytes) communities, we show that chimpanzees exhibit greater behavioural diversity in env
159                    Arboreal primates such as chimpanzees exhibit pronounced curvature in their hand a
160 hat humans and great apes, in particular the chimpanzee, exhibit an expanded and more complex occipit
161 monocyte-derived macrophages from humans and chimpanzees exhibited marginal differences in LPS respon
162                                       Female chimpanzees experienced their highest levels of cortisol
163                                         Male chimpanzees experienced their highest levels when expose
164 agers from the Republic of Congo and the Tai chimpanzees from Cote d'Ivoire.
165 d outside their natural range (ex situ), and chimpanzees from these programmes could potentially be u
166 ic motions in humans in ways that both mimic chimpanzee gait as well as an exaggerated human gait.
167  the latest reference sequence of the common chimpanzee genome, PT 2.19, only contains 19 FLIs.
168 vious works that rely on comparing human and chimpanzee genomes to measure mutation rates, the propos
169       We phased and assembled 3 ape genomes (chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan) using long-read and
170 cture and function across semiwild sanctuary chimpanzees, gorillas, and a sample of humans exposed to
171 utative new Plasmodium species widespread in chimpanzees, gorillas, and bonobos places the origin of
172 munodeficiency viruses (SIVs) infecting wild chimpanzees, gorillas, or monkeys (SIVcpz, SIVgor, or SI
173 ite matter tracts in the human, gorilla, and chimpanzee great apes and in the macaque monkey.
174  subsistence human populations and five wild chimpanzee groups according to four demographic scenario
175 solation tendencies over 10 years across two chimpanzee groups and show evidence of consistent 'empat
176                                We found that chimpanzee gut microbial alpha-diversity, composition, d
177 terium, Streptococcus, and Bacteroides), and chimpanzee gut microbial communities, like those of huma
178                                       Infant chimpanzee guts were enriched in some of the same taxa p
179  CenB The last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees had diverse lineage III KIR that passed on t
180   Conservation management programmes for the chimpanzee have been established outside their natural r
181                          For the first time, chimpanzees have been observed using tools to clean the
182                                   Aging male chimpanzees have more mutual friendships characterized b
183                           I highlight recent chimpanzee-human comparative findings that should help r
184 le case of evolutionary stasis for since the chimpanzee-human split c.8 Ma among >120 head-neck (HN)
185 rld monkeys (macaque/baboon) and Hominoidea (chimpanzee/human).
186                      The success of a single chimpanzee in our task suggests that teleological reason
187 s are extremely rare even in closely related chimpanzees in captivity, despite human-like CVD-risk-pr
188 markers used to infer ancestry of individual chimpanzees in ex situ populations and determine geograp
189 tory processes may differ between humans and chimpanzees in response to pathology.
190      On the one hand, it has been shown that chimpanzees in the wild and in captivity can solve vario
191            MRI scans were collected from 240 chimpanzees, including 122 that reliably produced AG sou
192 eying the sequence and function of CD4 in 50 chimpanzee individuals, we find that all chimpanzee CD4
193 owever, in direct contrast to human infants, chimpanzee infants harbored surprisingly high-diversity
194 th information on 31 behaviors, to show that chimpanzees inhabiting areas with high human impact have
195                             ZPG in declining chimpanzees is more readily obtainable through reducing
196                           Similar to humans, chimpanzee layer I astrocytes in the prefrontal cortex a
197 awning appears to be a natural phenomenon in chimpanzees lending support to the myriad experimental a
198 lly affects the other in ways that lead to a chimpanzee-like gait.
199 s for volume capabilities and converges on a chimpanzee-like phenotype in response to physical inacti
200 oots shared by our last common ancestor with chimpanzees, likely expediting fitness gains during inte
201                                              Chimpanzees made significantly more prosocial choices af
202 tical review of available data suggests that chimpanzee mass-specific muscular performance is a more
203 myocytes to oxygen deprivation in humans and chimpanzees may explain why humans are more prone to cer
204 research with our closest relatives suggests chimpanzees may use cognitive maps to find the most ener
205 ion: tool use was asymmetric with individual chimpanzees monopolizing the resource.
206 and directional selection between humans and chimpanzees more common among MAE genes (P<0.05).
207                                              Chimpanzees more rapidly acquired the technique when an
208  on coordination behaviour in three pairs of chimpanzees (mother/offspring dyads) during an experimen
209 1 species, including: human (GRCh37/GRCh38), chimpanzee, mouse, rat, cow, chicken, lizard, zebrafish,
210                               Unlike humans, chimpanzee muscle is composed of approximately 67% fast-
211 e and power output is 1.35 times higher in a chimpanzee muscle than a human muscle of similar size.
212 iffusion-weighted MRI in humans (n = 57) and chimpanzees (n = 20) and then analyzed using network neu
213 N = 39 paternities from 4 groups) but not in chimpanzees (N = 263 paternities from 7 groups).
214 ortisol in a 20-y longitudinal study of wild chimpanzees (n = 59 adults) in the Kanyawara community o
215                               Information on chimpanzee neuroanatomy is essential for understanding t
216                                We found that chimpanzees of both sexes had significantly higher urina
217 uence the style of high-arm grooming in wild chimpanzees of the Kanyawara community.
218 at gene expression variability in humans and chimpanzees often evolves under similar evolutionary pre
219 omparing human brain wiring with that of the chimpanzee, one of our closest living primate relatives.
220 mous single nucleotide polymorphisms, one in chimpanzees, one in gorillas and one in orangutans with
221 ng in vivo neuroimaging data from humans and chimpanzees, one of our closest living evolutionary rela
222 the CS, a finding previously undocumented in chimpanzees or any nonhuman primate.SIGNIFICANCE STATEME
223                               Here, pairs of chimpanzees or bonobos (Study 1) and 4-year-old children
224               Primates, specifically bonobo, chimpanzee, orangutan, and human, exhibited pial ILA wit
225 ly expressed genes in human compared to both chimpanzee organoids and macaque cortex, enriched for re
226       It is however unclear how children and chimpanzees, our closest relatives, combine their knowle
227 icopy sequences homologous to most human and chimpanzee palindromes.
228  possibly result in the extirpation of local chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes verus) populations.
229                    Populations of the common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) are in an impending risk of
230            Here, using a dataset of 144 wild chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) communities, we show that c
231  dental calculus samples recovered from wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) who died in
232                        In three experiments, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) always chose between an op
233 s body size variation using body weights for chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus)
234        Our closest living primate relatives, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus)
235                               In this study, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and orangutans (Pongo abel
236                                              Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) are, along with bonobos, h
237 an be juxtaposed - an approach which in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) has revealed cultural diff
238                                      Captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) have been shown to learn t
239 ate.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Recent studies in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) have shown that some can l
240           Here, we investigated how pairs of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) solved a problem of dynami
241 e structure and morphology of 16 hearts from chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) which were either healthy
242 ons on over 3000 conflict interactions in 44 chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), we provide evidence for r
243 pitopes could exist between VAR2CSA from the chimpanzee parasite Plasmodium reichenowi and Plasmodium
244 e, connections observed in humans but not in chimpanzees particularly link multimodal areas of the te
245 rdis and cartilago cordis is present in some chimpanzees, particularly those affected by myocardial f
246                No Papa-B is identical to any chimpanzee Patr-B, human HLA-B, or gorilla Gogo-B.
247 dence from small-scale societies, as well as chimpanzee patterns of intergroup conflict.
248 owing the tradition of comparing humans with chimpanzees placed under unfavorable conditions, the aut
249       Characterisation of isolates from wild chimpanzees point towards a human origin of these bacter
250 tive view posed by Wrangham et al.[1] in the chimpanzee populations that our original results were ba
251 aining this SNP are still circulating within chimpanzee populations.
252                                              Chimpanzees possess a large number of behavioral and cul
253 s and anatomically modern humans (AMH), with chimpanzees possessing a greater abundance of Bacteroide
254 FAP expression does not increase with age in chimpanzees, possibly indicative of lower oxidative stre
255                                For human and chimpanzees, recovery from acute HCV infection correlate
256                Smaller studies on humans and chimpanzees reported seemingly opposing results regardin
257 mporary human foragers and steady decline of chimpanzees represent puzzling population paradoxes, as
258                                     A female chimpanzee sat down at the dead body of a young male, se
259 ghter relative to the color of their irises; chimpanzee sclerae are darker than their irises.
260                                              Chimpanzee sera also showed robust neutralizing activity
261  human and chimpanzee, even though human and chimpanzee share a more recent common ancestor.
262                    Our results indicate that chimpanzees share some key features of HPA aging with hu
263 ture studies in closely related species like chimpanzees should implement identical methods for asses
264  Cameroonian forest, but zoo and Cameroonian chimpanzees showed no difference.
265  presented with pictures of dogs, humans and chimpanzees, showing angry, fearful, happy, neutral and
266      We suggest that termite fishing in wild chimpanzees shows some elements of cumulative cultural d
267 sion of a simian immunodeficiency virus from chimpanzees (SIVcpz) to humans.
268 ission of simian immunodeficiency virus from chimpanzees (SIVcpz).
269                                 Like humans, chimpanzee societies exhibit intragroup coordination and
270  (and females more generally) in bonobo than chimpanzee societies.
271 t all chimpanzee CD4 alleles encode a fixed, chimpanzee-specific substitution (34T) that creates a gl
272  We present a first comparison of humans and chimpanzees spontaneously acquiring the same technique a
273  substantially less diversity than Patr-B in chimpanzee subspecies and HLA-B in indigenous human popu
274 se toward the camera trap device compared to chimpanzees, suggesting higher visual attention and curi
275 zed dance-like behaviour between two captive chimpanzees - synchronized bipedalism.
276 constrained, permitting the investigation of chimpanzee termite-fishing culture.
277  more frequent and intense in male-dominated chimpanzees than in bonobos, where the highest-ranking i
278 icrobiota more closely resembled that of zoo chimpanzees than of Cameroonian gorillas.
279  of gut microbiota development in humans and chimpanzees that are consistent with interspecific diffe
280                                 We show that chimpanzees that have learned to produce these sounds sh
281 perior, portion was significantly greater in chimpanzees that reliably produced AG sounds compared wi
282 pulations since the split between humans and chimpanzees; the former are free of selective pressure a
283                                     However, chimpanzee tissue is inaccessible during neocortical neu
284  exposed 7 to 11-year-old children and adult chimpanzees to a Matching-to-Function (MTF) task to expl
285       These crosses relied on splenectomized chimpanzees to complete the liver stage of the parasite'
286            We observed contagious yawning in chimpanzees to confirm/disconfirm its existence in the b
287 d tomography (CT) and MRI data of humans and chimpanzees to quantify the spatial relationships betwee
288 nt and present-day humans, as well as of six chimpanzees, to detect differentially methylated regions
289 al association areas in humans compared with chimpanzees, together with a more pronounced modular top
290                                     However, chimpanzees use spontaneously tools in nature to achieve
291 uantitative trait loci (eQTLs) in humans and chimpanzees, using gene expression data from primary hea
292  rates of increase for six orally vaccinated chimpanzees very similar to four intramuscularly vaccina
293 IVcpz strains in CD4(+) T cells from captive chimpanzees, we found that certain viruses were unable t
294 o conditions, zoo-housed apes (2 gorillas, 5 chimpanzees) were familiarized to videos of a human hand
295 offer, in comparative perspective, the first chimpanzee white matter atlas, constructed from in vivo
296 e, we describe the phalangeal curvature of a chimpanzee who was raised during the 1930s in New York C
297                   We presented five pairs of chimpanzees with a turn-taking coordination game, where
298                     From a test panel of 167 chimpanzees with unknown origins or subspecies labels, w
299     CD4 allele frequencies varied among wild chimpanzees, with high diversity in all but the western
300 odelled on the territorial-based violence of chimpanzees, with limited comparison to other apes.

 
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