Great apes may have cognitive foundations for language

Popular Science 

You see a cat chasing a mouse. You probably don't realize it, but as soon as you catch sight of this scene unfolding, your brain makes a key distinction between the cat and the mouse: It identifies who's chasing, and who's being chased. This capacity to distinguish between the "agent" (the entity performing an action) and the "patient" (the entity upon which that action is being performed) is called "event decomposition," and it's long been thought that it was unique to humans. However, a new study published in PLOS Biology on November 26 suggests that this is not the case: great apes (specifically gorillas, chimpanzees, and orangutans) also seem to track events in the way that we do, distinguishing between agent and patient. This finding is notable because scientists believe event decomposition lies at the heart of something that is unique to humans.