チンパンジーが声の感情を道具音で表現―音楽・楽器演奏による発声表現外在化の起源―

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2025-03-27 京都大学

京都大学の研究では、チンパンジーが道具を使って音を作り、感情表現に近い行動を示すことが明らかになった。飼育個体「アユム」は床板を剥がして道具を作り、叩く・引きずる・投げるといった動作を組み合わせて構造的な音を生成。この音の構成は発声ディスプレイ「パント・フート」と類似しており、声の感情表現が道具音として外在化された可能性が示唆された。また、行動中に遊びの表情が観察され、音生成が快情動と結びつく可能性も示された。本成果は、人間の音楽や楽器演奏の進化的起源理解に重要な手がかりを提供する。

チンパンジーが声の感情を道具音で表現―音楽・楽器演奏による発声表現外在化の起源―
撮影:服部裕子、©京都大学 ヒト行動進化研究センター

<関連情報>

飼育下のチンパンジーにおける組み合わせ的な楽器音生成:発声の外在化の進化 Combinatorial Instrumental Sound-Making in a Captive Chimpanzee: Evolution of Vocal Externalization

Yuko Hattori, Pavel Voinov, Makiko Uchikoshi
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences  Published: 25 March 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.70239

ABSTRACT

Instrumental music may have evolved from earlier vocal expressions, gradually expanding into rhythmic sound production using tools. We report a novel case in which a captive male chimpanzee spontaneously produced a structured instrumental display using a self-fabricated tool. The display consisted of combinatorial sequences of rhythmic actions resembling the structure of pant–hoot vocalizations. Transition analyses revealed significant nonrandom transitions from tool-assisted drumming to object dragging, and from dragging to object throwing, and rhythm analyses showed that the drumming patterns were predominantly isochronous. Tool-assisted drumming was less variable than bodily drumming. Notably, facial expressions, including play face and silent bared teeth, were also observed, suggesting emotional engagement and potential social signaling. These findings indicate that emotional expression—usually mediated via vocalizations—can be externalized through instrumental sound. This behavior may provide important insights into evolutionary pathways leading to human musical expression. Our findings also support the hypothesis that music may have originated from affective vocal expression and evolved through multimodal integration of sound-making behaviors. Observations from captive environments, where constraints such as predator avoidance are relaxed, may reveal otherwise-hidden capacities for structured sound production. Our research highlights the evolutionary continuity between primate acoustic displays and the human capacity for music.

生物環境工学
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