Laughter is universal among humans. Researchers have found that our closest relatives, apes, also laugh, and do it with a ...
Great apes and humans all laugh with a steady, even rhythm, and a new study finds it has barely changed in 15 million years.
But it is a fascinating story about the evolution of not just laughter among great apes, but of the origins of our own vocal ...
Until now, the brain regions underlying laughter were not well understood, in part because it's hard to elicit genuine ...
Laughter feels deeply human. It appears in conversations, family gatherings, awkward moments and bursts of joy.
Researchers now have compared laughter in humans to laughter in the various great apes — chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas and ...
A study of chimps, gorillas and other great apes, including human children, sheds light on how laughter has evolved.
A comparative study of laughter across humans and other great apes found that its regular rhythmic structure may date back ...
The play’s arc takes us from 1924 Munkács, a Czechoslovak town with deep Hungarian roots, through the Holocaust years and to present-day Australia.