Jacques Vauclair
Papers
1
Total Citations
24
H-Index
1
About
Jacques Vauclair is a leading figure in comparative psychology and cognitive ethology, whose work has fundamentally reshaped our understanding of primate communication and its relationship to human language. His research centers on the evolutionary origins of language, exploring how non-human primates process symbolic information, gestures, and social cues. Vauclair’s major contributions include demonstrating that primates possess sophisticated cognitive abilities—such as categorization, analogical reasoning, and intentional communication—that were once thought uniquely human. His seminal paper, "Primate Communication and Human Language" (2011, 24 citations), synthesizes decades of experimental data to argue that the roots of language lie in shared ancestral capacities for gesture and social cognition. Beyond this, his influential studies on manual laterality and object manipulation in apes and monkeys have provided key evidence for the evolution of hemispheric specialization. Vauclair’s work has bridged psychology, primatology, and linguistics, challenging long-held taboos about language origins. With a career spanning over 30 years, he has authored numerous books and papers that continue to inspire new generations of researchers exploring the cognitive continuities between humans and other animals.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1Primate Communication and Human Language24 citations · 2011