“…Studies have demonstrated that some chimpanzees and other great apes voluntarily produce several classes of novel sounds to capture the attention of an otherwise inattentive audience (Theall and Povinelli, 1999;Liebal et al, 2004;Poss et al, 2006;Cartmill and Byrne, 2007;Leavens et al, 2008;Gentry et al, 2015). Experimental evidence has shown that the use of AG sounds is under voluntary control Hopkins et al, 2011), often occurs in conjunction with manual gestures (Hopkins and Cantero, 2003) and grooming (Leavens et al, 2014;Fedurek et al, 2015;Watts, 2016), is lateralized to the left hemisphere (Losin et al, 2008;Wallez et al, 2012), and is socially learned (Taglialatela et al, 2012). For instance, systematic investigations of the production of AG sounds in 279 chimpanzees from two different populations found that 52% and 46% of the chimpanzees within each sample reliably produce some type of AG sound, respectively (Hopkins et al, 2010;Taglialatela et al, 2012).…”