Researchers say marmoset monkeys call each other  name, similar to how humans recognize each other. The 20-cm-long primates are native to South America. Scientists  the Hebrew University  Jerusalem studied the social interaction  10 marmosets. The research team discovered that the animals used unique calls  other monkeys  their group. Dr David Omer, co-author  the study, said marmosets are the first non-human primates known to use names. The researchers put the marmosets  a variety of pairings. They then used artificial intelligence to analyze more than 50,000 monkey calls. This allowed the scientists to determine the animals had names  each other.
Dr Omer believes the findings could shed light  how human language evolved. He said: "Until quite recently, people thought that human language was a singular phenomenon that popped  of nothing. We're starting to see evidence that this is not the case." Omer postulated how marmosets developed a system  name calling. He said: "Marmosets live  small, monogamous family groups, and take care  their young together, much  humans do. These similarities suggest that they faced comparable evolutionary social challenges to our early pre-linguistic ancestors." Other creatures known to identify others  their group  name are dolphins and elephants.