Observations of the gestural communication of two groups of captive chimpanzees are reported. For one group the observations represent a fourth longitudinal time point over a 12 year period; the other group was observed for the first time. There were two main questions. The first concerned how young chimpanzees use their gestures, with special foci on the flexibility displayed in signal use and on the sensitivity to audience displayed in signal choice. It was found that chimpanzees are very flexible in their signal use (different signals for same goal, same signal for different goals) and somewhat sensitive to audience (signal choice based on attentional state of recipient). The second question was how chimpanzees acquire their gestural signals. Comparisons between the two groups showed much individual variability both within and between groups. In addition, when each of the two contemporary groups was compared with the previous longitudinal time points for one of the groups, no differences in concordance were found. It was concluded that youngsters were not imitatively learning their communicatory gestures from conspecifics, but rather that they were individually ritualizing them with one another in social interaction. An experimental study in which two individuals were taught new gestures and returned to their groups — with no subsequent signs of imitation — corroborated this conclusion. Implications of the current findings for the understanding of chimpanzee communication and social learning are discussed.
Cited by (127)
Cited by 127 other publications
Fröhlich, Marlen, Cedric Boeckx & Claudio Tennie
2025. The role of exploration and exploitation in primate communication. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 292:2039
Bart Geurts & Richard Moore
2025. Evolutionary Pragmatics,
Graham, Kirsty E., Federico Rossano & Richard T. Moore
2025. The origin of great ape gestural forms. Biological Reviews 100:1 ► pp. 190 ff.
Gupta, Shreejata, Eulalie Pequay, Clément François & Isabelle Dautriche
2025. Forms and Functions of Gestures in Preverbal 12‐ to 15‐Months Old Infants. Infancy 30:1
Haldar, Esha, Ariana Hernández Sánchez, Claudio Tennie, Sara Torres Ortiz, Janneke Vos, Maurice Valbert & Auguste M. P. von Bayern
2025. Third-party imitation is not restricted to humans. Scientific Reports 15:1
Hex, Severine B. S. W. & Daniel I. Rubenstein
2025. “Age of risk” shapes simpler multimodal communication in the juvenile plains zebra (Equus quagga). Communications Biology 8:1
Burghardt, Gordon M., Sergio M. Pellis, Jeffrey C. Schank, Paul E. Smaldino, Louk J.M.J. Vanderschuren & Elisabetta Palagi
2024. Animal play and evolution: Seven timely research issues about enigmatic phenomena. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 160 ► pp. 105617 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen, Maria A. van Noordwijk, Tatang Mitra Setia, Carel P. van Schaik & Ulrich Knief
2024. Wild and captive immature orangutans differ in their non-vocal communication with others, but not with their mothers. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 78:1
Lang, Martin & Radek Kundt
2024. The evolution of human ritual behavior as a cooperative signaling platform. Religion, Brain & Behavior 14:4 ► pp. 377 ff.
Luchkina, Elena & Sandra Waxman
2024. Talking About the Absent and the Abstract: Referential Communication in Language and Gesture. Perspectives on Psychological Science 19:6 ► pp. 978 ff.
Prieur, Jacques, Katja Liebal & Simone Pika
2024. Social negotiation and “accents” in Western lowland gorillas’ gestural communication. Scientific Reports 14:1
van Boekholt, Bas, Isabelle Clark, Nicole J. Lahiff, Kevin C. Lee, Katie E. Slocombe, Claudia Wilke & Simone Pika
2024. Idiosyncratic gesture use in a mother-infant dyad in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) in the wild. Animal Cognition 27:1
Amici, Federica & Katja Liebal
2023. Testing Hypotheses for the Emergence of Gestural Communication in Great and Small Apes (Pan troglodytes, Pongo abelii, Symphalangus syndactylus). International Journal of Primatology 44:2 ► pp. 319 ff.
Papadopoulos, Dennis
2023. Shared Intentionality in Nonhuman Great Apes: a Normative Model. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 14:4 ► pp. 1125 ff.
Graham, Kirsty E., Gal Badihi, Alexandra Safryghin, Charlotte Grund & Catherine Hobaiter
2022. A socio-ecological perspective on the gestural communication of great ape species, individuals, and social units. Ethology Ecology & Evolution 34:3 ► pp. 235 ff.
Schel, Anne Marijke, Axelle Bono, Juliette Aychet, Simone Pika & Alban Lemasson
2022. Intentional gestural communication amongst red-capped mangabeys (Cercocebus torquatus). Animal Cognition 25:5 ► pp. 1313 ff.
Schick, Johanna, Caroline Fryns, Franziska Wegdell, Marion Laporte, Klaus Zuberbühler, Carel P. van Schaik, Simon W. Townsend & Sabine Stoll
2022. The function and evolution of child-directed communication. PLOS Biology 20:5 ► pp. e3001630 ff.
Warren, Elizabeth & Josep Call
2022. Inferential Communication: Bridging the Gap Between Intentional and Ostensive Communication in Non-human Primates. Frontiers in Psychology 12
Wilson, Vanessa A. D., Klaus Zuberbühler & Balthasar Bickel
2022. The evolutionary origins of syntax: Event cognition in nonhuman primates. Science Advances 8:25
Bandini, Elisa, Johannes Grossmann, Martina Funk, Anna Albiach‐Serrano & Claudio Tennie
2021. Naïve orangutans (Pongo abelii and Pongo pygmaeus) individually acquire nut‐cracking using hammer tools. American Journal of Primatology 83:9
Dafreville, Mawa, Catherine Hobaiter, Michèle Guidetti, David Sillam‐Dussès & Marie Bourjade
2021. Sensitivity to the communicative partner's attentional state: A developmental study on mother–infant dyads in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii). American Journal of Primatology 83:12
Fröhlich, Marlen, Natasha Bartolotta, Caroline Fryns, Colin Wagner, Laurene Momon, Marvin Jaffrezic, Tatang Mitra Setia, Caroline Schuppli, Maria A. van Noordwijk & Carel P. van Schaik
2021. Orangutans have larger gestural repertoires in captivity than in the wild—A case of weak innovation?. iScience 24:11 ► pp. 103304 ff.
Motes-Rodrigo, Alba, Roger Mundry, Josep Call & Claudio Tennie
2021. Evaluating the influence of action- and subject-specific factors on chimpanzee action copying. Royal Society Open Science 8:2
Motes‐Rodrigo, Alba & Claudio Tennie
2021. The Method of Local Restriction: in search of potential great ape culture‐dependent forms. Biological Reviews 96:4 ► pp. 1441 ff.
Nelson, Rachel S., Erin C. Connelly & Lydia M. Hopper
2021. Social Learning in Chimpanzees. In The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition, ► pp. 534 ff.
Rossano, Federico & Stephan P. Kaufhold
2021. Animal Communication Overview. In The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition, ► pp. 5 ff.
Aychet, Juliette, Pablo Pezzino, Arnaud Rossard, Philippe Bec, Catherine Blois-Heulin & Alban Lemasson
2020. Red-capped mangabeys (Cercocebus torquatus) adapt their interspecific gestural communication to the recipient’s behaviour. Scientific Reports 10:1
Donnellan, Ed, Colin Bannard, Michelle L. McGillion, Katie E. Slocombe & Danielle Matthews
2020. Infants’ intentionally communicative vocalizations elicit responses from caregivers and are the best predictors of the transition to language: A longitudinal investigation of infants’ vocalizations, gestures and word production. Developmental Science 23:1
2020. The context of chest beating and hand clapping in wild western gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). Primates 61:2 ► pp. 225 ff.
Tennie, Claudio & Carel P. van Schaik
2020. Spontaneous (minimal) ritual in non-human great apes?. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 375:1805 ► pp. 20190423 ff.
Bard, Kim A., Vanessa Maguire-Herring, Masaki Tomonaga & Tetsuro Matsuzawa
2019. The gesture ‘Touch’: Does meaning-making develop in chimpanzees’ use of a very flexible gesture?. Animal Cognition 22:4 ► pp. 535 ff.
Cartmill, Erica A. & Catherine Hobaiter
2019. Developmental perspectives on primate gesture: 100 years in the making. Animal Cognition 22:4 ► pp. 453 ff.
Gupta, Shreejata & Anindya Sinha
2019. Gestural communication of wild bonnet macaques in the Bandipur National Park, Southern India. Behavioural Processes 168 ► pp. 103956 ff.
Knox, Andrea, Joey Markx, Emma How, Abdul Azis, Catherine Hobaiter, Frank J. F. van Veen & Helen Morrogh-Bernard
2019. Gesture Use in Communication between Mothers and Offspring in Wild Orang-Utans (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii) from the Sabangau Peat-Swamp Forest, Borneo. International Journal of Primatology 40:3 ► pp. 393 ff.
2019. How primates acquire their gestures: evaluating current theories and evidence. Animal Cognition 22:4 ► pp. 473 ff.
Luef, Eva Maria & Simone Pika
2019. Social relationships and greetings in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): use of signal combinations. Primates 60:6 ► pp. 507 ff.
Marlen, Fröhlich & Pika Simone
2019. Gestural usage and development in two chimpanzee groups of different subspecies (Pan troglodytes verus/P.t. schweinfurthii). In The Chimpanzees of the Taï Forest, ► pp. 422 ff.
Mertz, Justine, Annaëlle Surreault, Erica van de Waal & Jennifer Botting
2019. Primates are living links to our past: The contribution of comparative studies with wild vervet monkeys to the field of social cognition. Cortex 118 ► pp. 65 ff.
Oña, Linda S., Wendy Sandler & Katja Liebal
2019. A stepping stone to compositionality in chimpanzee communication. PeerJ 7 ► pp. e7623 ff.
Pika, Simone & Marlen Fröhlich
2019. Gestural acquisition in great apes: the Social Negotiation Hypothesis. Animal Cognition 22:4 ► pp. 551 ff.
Tennie, Claudio
2019. Could nonhuman great apes also have cultural evolutionary psychology?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42
Tennie, Claudio
2023. Focusing on relevant data and correcting misconceptions reaffirms the ape ZLS. Physics of Life Reviews 44 ► pp. 94 ff.
Tomasello, Michael & Josep Call
2019. Thirty years of great ape gestures. Animal Cognition 22:4 ► pp. 461 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen & Catherine Hobaiter
2018. The development of gestural communication in great apes. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 72:12
Fröhlich, Marlen & Carel P. van Schaik
2018. The function of primate multimodal communication. Animal Cognition 21:5 ► pp. 619 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen & Carel P. van Schaik
2020. Must all signals be evolved? A proposal for a new classification of communicative acts. WIREs Cognitive Science 11:4
Watson, Stuart K., Jennifer Botting, Andrew Whiten & Erica van de Waal
2018. Culture and Selective Social Learning in Wild and Captive Primates. In Evolution of Primate Social Cognition [Interdisciplinary Evolution Research, 5], ► pp. 211 ff.
Fischer, Julia & Tabitha Price
2017. Meaning, intention, and inference in primate vocal communication. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 82 ► pp. 22 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen, Gudrun Müller, Claudia Zeiträg, Roman M. Wittig & Simone Pika
2017. Gestural development of chimpanzees in the wild: the impact of interactional experience. Animal Behaviour 134 ► pp. 271 ff.
Sturdy, Christopher B. & Elena Nicoladis
2017. How Much of Language Acquisition Does Operant Conditioning Explain?. Frontiers in Psychology 8
Engelmann, Jan
2016. Michael Tomasello. In Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, ► pp. 1 ff.
Engelmann, Jan
2021. Michael Tomasello. In Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, ► pp. 5108 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen, Roman M. Wittig & Simone Pika
2016. Play-solicitation gestures in chimpanzees in the wild: flexible adjustment to social circumstances and individual matrices. Royal Society Open Science 3:8 ► pp. 160278 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen, Roman M. Wittig & Simone Pika
2016. Should I stay or should I go? Initiation of joint travel in mother–infant dyads of two chimpanzee communities in the wild. Animal Cognition 19:3 ► pp. 483 ff.
Fröhlich, Marlen, Roman M. Wittig & Simone Pika
2019. The ontogeny of intentional communication in chimpanzees in the wild. Developmental Science 22:1
Liebal, Katja
2016. The ontogeny of great ape gesture – not a simple story. Physics of Life Reviews 16 ► pp. 85 ff.
Moore, Richard
2016. Meaning and ostension in great ape gestural communication. Animal Cognition 19:1 ► pp. 223 ff.
Roberts, Anna Ilona & Sam George Bradley Roberts
2016. Wild chimpanzees modify modality of gestures according to the strength of social bonds and personal network size. Scientific Reports 6:1
Burghardt, Gordon M.
2015. Creativity, Play, and the Pace of Evolution. In Animal Creativity and Innovation, ► pp. 129 ff.
Burghardt, Gordon M.
2025. The enduring search for the nature of play. International Journal of Play 14:1 ► pp. 20 ff.
2015. Intentional gestural communication and discrimination of human attentional states in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Animal Cognition 18:4 ► pp. 875 ff.
2015. Do Tonkean macaques (Macaca tonkeana) tailor their gestural and visual signals to fit the attentional states of a human partner?. Animal Cognition 18:2 ► pp. 451 ff.
Demuru, Elisa, Pier F. Ferrari & Elisabetta Palagi
2015. Emotionality and intentionality in bonobo playful communication. Animal Cognition 18:1 ► pp. 333 ff.
Haun, Daniel & Harriet Over
2015. Like Me: A Homophily-Based Account of Human Culture. In Epistemological Dimensions of Evolutionary Psychology, ► pp. 117 ff.
Larsson, Matz
2015. Tool-use-associated sound in the evolution of language. Animal Cognition 18:5 ► pp. 993 ff.
Zentall, Thomas R.
2015. Cognitive and Noncognitive Aspects of Social Learning. In Animal Creativity and Innovation, ► pp. 335 ff.
Roberts, Anna Ilona, Samuel George Bradley Roberts & Sarah-Jane Vick
2014. The repertoire and intentionality of gestural communication in wild chimpanzees. Animal Cognition 17:2 ► pp. 317 ff.
Halina, Marta, Federico Rossano & Michael Tomasello
2013. The ontogenetic ritualization of bonobo gestures. Animal Cognition 16:4 ► pp. 653 ff.
Matsumoto, David & Hyisung C. Hwang
2013. Cultural Similarities and Differences in Emblematic Gestures. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 37:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Meunier, Hélène, J. Prieur & J. Vauclair
2013. Olive baboons communicate intentionally by pointing. Animal Cognition 16:2 ► pp. 155 ff.
Smith, Lindsey W. & Roberto A. Delgado
2013. Considering the role of social dynamics and positional behavior in gestural communication research. American Journal of Primatology 75:9 ► pp. 891 ff.
Zuidema, Willem
2013. Language in Nature: On the Evolutionary Roots of a Cultural Phenomenon. In The Language Phenomenon [The Frontiers Collection, ], ► pp. 163 ff.
Liebal, Katja & Josep Call
2012. The origins of non-human primates' manual gestures. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 367:1585 ► pp. 118 ff.
2011. Focus on the essential: all great apes know when others are being attentive. Animal Cognition 14:3 ► pp. 433 ff.
Anderson, James R., Hika Kuroshima, Yuko Hattori & Kazuo Fujita
2010. Flexibility in the use of requesting gestures in squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus). American Journal of Primatology 72:8 ► pp. 707 ff.
Schneider, Christel, Josep Call & Katja Liebal
2010. Do bonobos say NO by shaking their head?. Primates 51:3 ► pp. 199 ff.
Schneider, Christel, Josep Call & Katja Liebal
2012. What Role Do Mothers Play in the Gestural Acquisition of Bonobos (Pan paniscus) and Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)?. International Journal of Primatology 33:1 ► pp. 246 ff.
SCHNEIDER, CHRISTEL, JOSEP CALL & KATJA LIEBAL
2012. Onset and early use of gestural communication in nonhuman great apes. American Journal of Primatology 74:2 ► pp. 102 ff.
Tennie, Claudio, Josep Call, Michael Tomasello & Pier Francesco Ferrari
2010. Evidence for Emulation in Chimpanzees in Social Settings Using the Floating Peanut Task. PLoS ONE 5:5 ► pp. e10544 ff.
Tomasello, Michael & Henrike Moll
2010. The Gap is Social: Human Shared Intentionality and Culture. In Mind the Gap, ► pp. 331 ff.
Towner, S.
2010. Concept of mind in non-human primates. Bioscience Horizons 3:1 ► pp. 96 ff.
Perelle, Ira B. & Lee Ehrman
2009. Handedness: A Behavioral Laterality Manifestation. In Handbook of Behavior Genetics, ► pp. 331 ff.
Tennie, Claudio, Josep Call & Michael Tomasello
2009. Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 364:1528 ► pp. 2405 ff.
2009. Dogs, Canis familiaris, fail to copy intransitive actions in third-party contextual imitation tasks. Animal Behaviour 77:6 ► pp. 1491 ff.
Watson, Claire F. I. & Christine A. Caldwell
2009. Understanding Behavioral Traditions in Primates: Are Current Experimental Approaches Too Focused on Food?. International Journal of Primatology 30:1 ► pp. 143 ff.
Fischer, J.
2008. Transmission of Acquired Information in Nonhuman Primates. In Learning and Memory: A Comprehensive Reference, ► pp. 299 ff.
Liuzzi, Gianpiero, Tanja Ellger, Agnes Flöel, Caterina Breitenstein, Andreas Jansen & Stefan Knecht
2008. Walking the talk—Speech activates the leg motor cortex. Neuropsychologia 46:11 ► pp. 2824 ff.
Pika, Simone
2008. Gestures of apes and pre-linguistic human children: Similar or different?. First Language 28:2 ► pp. 116 ff.
Smith, Kenny & Simon Kirby
2008. Cultural evolution: implications for understanding the human language faculty and its evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 363:1509 ► pp. 3591 ff.
Bonnie, Kristin E, Victoria Horner, Andrew Whiten & Frans B.M de Waal
2007. Spread of arbitrary conventions among chimpanzees: a controlled experiment. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 274:1608 ► pp. 367 ff.
Moll, Henrike & Michael Tomasello
2007. Cooperation and human cognition: the Vygotskian intelligence hypothesis. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 362:1480 ► pp. 639 ff.
Call, J. & M. Tomasello
2006. Apes: Gesture Communication. In Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics, ► pp. 317 ff.
2006. Etho-ethnology and ethno-ethology. Social Science Information 45:2 ► pp. 155 ff.
Sommerville, Jessica A. & Jean Decety
2006. Weaving the fabric of social interaction: Articulating developmental psychology and cognitive neuroscience in the domain of motor cognition. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 13:2 ► pp. 179 ff.
Leavens, David A., Jamie L. Russell & William D. Hopkins
2005. Intentionality as Measured in the Persistence and Elaboration of Communication by Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Child Development 76:1 ► pp. 291 ff.
2005. In Search of the Uniquely Human. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28:5 ► pp. 721 ff.
Hook, Michelle A.
2004. The Evolution of Lateralized Motor Functions. In Comparative Vertebrate Cognition, ► pp. 325 ff.
Kaminski, Juliane, Josep Call & Michael Tomasello
2004. Body orientation and face orientation: two factors controlling apes? begging behavior from humans. Animal Cognition 7:4 ► pp. 216 ff.
Liebal, Katja, Josep Call & Michael Tomasello
2004. Use of gesture sequences in chimpanzees. American Journal of Primatology 64:4 ► pp. 377 ff.
Smith, Kenny
2004. The evolution of vocabulary. Journal of Theoretical Biology 228:1 ► pp. 127 ff.
Tomasello, M
2004. Les aspects pragmatiques de la communication chez les primates. Psychologie Française 49:2 ► pp. 209 ff.
King, Barbara J. & Stuart G. Shanker
2003. How can we know the dancer from the dance?. Anthropological Theory 3:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
Perry, Susan, Mary Baker, Linda Fedigan, Julie Gros‐Louis, Katherine Jack, Katherine C. MacKinnon, Joseph H. Manson, Melissa Panger, Kendra Pyle & Lisa Rose
2003. Social Conventions in Wild White‐faced Capuchin Monkeys. Current Anthropology 44:2 ► pp. 241 ff.
L. Saitta & Call, Josep
2003. Beyond learning fixed rules and social cues: abstraction in the social arena. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 358:1435 ► pp. 1189 ff.
Tomasello, Michael, Josep Call & Brian Hare
2003. Chimpanzees understand psychological states – the question is which ones and to what extent. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7:4 ► pp. 153 ff.
Tomassello, Michael
2003. The Human Adaptation for Culture. In Handbook of Evolution, ► pp. 1 ff.
Whiten, Andrew, Victoria Horner & Sarah Marshall‐Pescini
2003. Cultural panthropology. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 12:2 ► pp. 92 ff.
Zuberbühler, Klaus
2003. Referential Signaling in Non-Human Primates: Cognitive Precursors and Limitations for the Evolution of Language [Advances in the Study of Behavior, 33], ► pp. 265 ff.
Zuberbühler, Klaus
2012. Communication in Nonhuman Primates. In The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Evolutionary Psychology, ► pp. 320 ff.
Fischer, Julia
2002. Developmental Modifications in the Vocal Behavior of Non-Human Primates. In Primate Audition [Frontiers in Neuroscience, 20024875],
Fischer, Julia
2017. Information Transmission in Nonhuman Primates: From Communication to Social Learning ☆. In Learning and Memory: A Comprehensive Reference, ► pp. 171 ff.
Maestripieri, Dario, Stephen K. Ross & Nancy L. Megna
2002. Mother-infant interactions in western lowland gorillas ( Gorilla gorilla gorilla): Spatial relationships, communication and opportunities for social learning.. Journal of Comparative Psychology 116:3 ► pp. 219 ff.
Call, Josep
2001. Chimpanzee social cognition. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 5:9 ► pp. 388 ff.
Call, Josep
2004. The Use of Social Information in Chimpanzees and Dogs. In Comparative Vertebrate Cognition, ► pp. 263 ff.
Call, Josep
2012. Social knowledge in primates. In Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, ► pp. 71 ff.
Tomasello, Michael
1999. The Human Adaptation for Culture. Annual Review of Anthropology 28:1 ► pp. 509 ff.
Tomasello, Michael
2000. Culture and Cognitive Development. Current Directions in Psychological Science 9:2 ► pp. 37 ff.
Tomasello, Michael
2001. Cultural Transmission. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 32:2 ► pp. 135 ff.
Tomasello, Michael
2002. Some Facts about Primate (including Human) Communication and Social Learning. In Simulating the Evolution of Language, ► pp. 327 ff.
2008. Cultural Transmission: A View from Chimpanzees and Human Infants. In Cultural Transmission, ► pp. 33 ff.
[no author supplied]
2005. REFERENCES. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 70:1 ► pp. 123 ff.
[no author supplied]
2021. Social Learning and Teaching. In The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition, ► pp. 441 ff.
[no author supplied]
2021. Communication and Language. In The Cambridge Handbook of Animal Cognition, ► pp. 3 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 8 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.