Comprehension precedes production of a complex call sequence
Growing evidence of animals combining discrete, meaningful calls into sequences--a feature once thought unique to linguistic syntax--has presented the opportunity to investigate the evolutionary origins of syntactic communication. The arbitrary assignment of meaning to words marks an important step in human language evolution, and a necessary precursor to generating further meaning through sentences. Studying how other animals that produce call sequences learn the meaning of these signals could help shed light on how referentiality and semantic combinatoriality evolved. Given the presence of meaningful call sequences has only recently been revealed in several non-human animals, ontogenetic s