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OverviewPointing is a fundamental gesture that connects individuals with their social and physical worlds. Whether communicating information about the external environment or serving to clarify to whom or what someone is referring, pointing may appear to be a uniquely human and universal action. However, it develops in varied social and cultural contexts, and even some nonhuman species point and can understand pointing cues. While there has been substantial research on the cultural, developmental, and evolutionary aspects of pointing, these perspectives remain fragmented. This book bridges this gap by bringing together leading scholars from cognitive psychology, evolutionary anthropology and biology, animal behavior, developmental psychology, and comparative psychology to synthesize current findings, highlight emerging directions, and provide students and researchers with a comprehensive view of the field. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark A. Krause (Southern Oregon University) , Kim A. Bard (University of Michigan, Dearborn) , David A. Leavens (University of Sussex)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Weight: 0.250kg ISBN: 9781009445726ISBN 10: 1009445723 Pages: 434 Publication Date: 11 June 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'This excellent edited volume is the first in more than two decades to examine pointing, a rudimentary referential social communication gesture that is foundational for human language development and for human and non-human social cognition. Environmental, contextual, cultural, configurational, and comparative aspects of pointing are examined in depth.' Deborah L. Best, William L. Poteat Professor of Psychology, Emerita, Wake Forest University, USA 'This book is a groundbreaking contribution to the developmental sciences with its holistic orientation. A seemingly small behavior, pointing as the target of the book, is demonstrated to be fundamentally integrated into an evolutionary framework as well as fundamentally situated in cultural contexts, which both shape its developmental embeddedness. The book is also exemplar in bringing together experts from different cultures.' Heidi Keller, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Osnabrück University, Germany, and Distinguished Fellow, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel 'This book is a must-have for those who are interested in development and evolution of communication. It takes us on an exciting intellectual journey that spans many species of animals and many human cultures, and makes us think deeply about what it means to communicate.' Sotaro Kita, Professor of Psychology of Language, University of Warwick, UK 'Pointing is an exceptional volume that reflects the amazing growth in the field concerning the nature and function of pointing. The work greatly expands an understanding of this important behavior in all its varieties and across many species. The editors have assembled a top-notch group of contributors and have organized their works in a manner that assembles insights of the larger literature in a single volume. Especially important are the messages brought to bear on the important role of pointing in socio-cognitive and language development, the cross-cultural focus that well documents the influence of environment and socialization on pointing, and the chapters documenting that pointing occurs in many animal species. Altogether, the book is a major contribution to the field that should be on all scholars' reading lists.' David Matsumoto, Professor of Psychology, San Francisco State University, USA, and Director, Humintell LLC Author InformationMark A. Krause is a professor of psychology at Southern Oregon University. He is co-editor of Evolution of Learning and Memory Mechanisms (Cambridge, 2022) and serves on the editorial boards for Journal of Comparative Psychology and Animal Behavior and Cognition. Mark has published research on chimpanzees, snakes, birds, and humans and began his career studying pointing in chimpanzees. Kim A. Bard is a former president of both the Primate Society of Great Britain and the European Federation for Primatology, and currently holds a Sponsored Affiliate position at the University of Michigan, Dearborn. She has worked combining comparative perspectives with developmental perspectives in the study of chimpanzees, orangutans, and humans for over forty years. Kim is co-editor of Reaching into Thought: The Minds of the Great Apes (Cambridge, 1996), and The Cultural Nature of Attachment: Contextualizing Relationships and Development (2017). David A. Leavens is an Emeritus Reader in Comparative Psychology at the University of Sussex. For the last thirty years, he has studied pointing, pointing comprehension, and other aspects of joint attention in a variety of species, including chimpanzees, humans, dogs, and cats. David currently holds positions on the editorial boards for Animal Cognition and the Journal of Comparative Psychology. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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