Erik Steiger discusses the operational pain of legacy PDF generation in regulated banking and manufacturing. He explains how ...
In fact, when they were tickled, laughter from both apes and humans was isochronous, meaning that the laughs followed a ...
Biologists group animals with similar traits into broad categories called orders. Despite their similarities, animal species ...
All great apes exchange calls of some sort, whether it’s an orangutan’s hoot, a bonobo’s chatter, a gorilla’s grunt, or a ...
A study of chimps, gorillas and other great apes, including human children, sheds light on how laughter has evolved.
Human evolution is generally explained through changes in brain size, locomotion or tool use, but new research from Wits University suggests that gum disease and changes in facial structure may have ...
Laughter is universal among humans. Researchers have found that our closest relatives, apes, also laugh, and do it with a ...
All living great apes (orangutans, bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas, and humans) laugh. However, it’s been unclear how laughter ...
Great apes and humans all laugh with a steady, even rhythm, and a new study finds it has barely changed in 15 million years.
What would a person in Revolutionary America sound like? Early letters, documents, and diaries help us listen in.
Artificial intelligence has already changed how software gets built. Code can now be generated in minutes, testing can be ...