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Researchers have identified over eighty gestures made by nonhuman great apes, such as clapping and rocking from side to side, that appear to convey information and that seem to be biologically inherited. Kirsty E. Graham and Catherine Hobaiter hypothesized that humans may be able to interpret great ape gestures, either through an evolutionary inheritance or as part of more general human cognitive abilities. The researchers tested this hypothesis by enlisting participants in an online game in which they had to correctly identify the meanings of ape gestures seen in videos. Though participants achieved some success, it is unclear whether they sometimes did so by making use of additional context provided by the images or sounds in the video recordings.