“To evolutionary psychologists, the noise made by gorillas, chimps and bonobos when you tickle their feet is no laughing matter. These distinctive vocalisations suggest that rather than evolving separately, laughter evolved in a shared common ancestor before becoming tailored in each primate species, including humans.” “Through the differentiation of human social interaction over time this ‘simple’ form of laughter may have diversified to become a spectrum of different laughter variants in order to accommodate increased complexity of human social interaction.”
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Laughter Just a Reflex?
New research suggests that laughter, in the form of a reflex-like reaction to touch, has been adopted into human social behaviour from animal behaviour.
Monthly Issue
April 2026
In this monthly issue, we examine how our understanding of energy — and how we source and use it — is evolving.
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11 articles