Patterns of Primate Behavior |
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Page 95
... displays , and neuroendocrine responses - are stereotyped , innate responses . They differ in that signals and displays are directed outward , as communicative acts , and imply minimal biochemical change within the animal , whereas ...
... displays , and neuroendocrine responses - are stereotyped , innate responses . They differ in that signals and displays are directed outward , as communicative acts , and imply minimal biochemical change within the animal , whereas ...
Page 207
... displays of aggression or frustration . On occasion they aim the objects they throw at the target of their display . During aggressive displays they strike objects with sticks and saplings , and they drag , wave , or beat sticks and ...
... displays of aggression or frustration . On occasion they aim the objects they throw at the target of their display . During aggressive displays they strike objects with sticks and saplings , and they drag , wave , or beat sticks and ...
Page 209
... displays males sometimes performed on arriving at the cultivated area , the chimpanzees were generally silent . Even very active juvenile play was totally silent . The animals communicated by posture , facial expression , and touch ...
... displays males sometimes performed on arriving at the cultivated area , the chimpanzees were generally silent . Even very active juvenile play was totally silent . The animals communicated by posture , facial expression , and touch ...
Contents
TWO | 27 |
Communication | 41 |
Sensory limitations on the perception of communication | 58 |
Copyright | |
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activity adult females adult males Africa aggression animal's animals anthropoids apes appear arboreal Barro Colorado Island cage central chacma baboons characteristics chimpanzees color common baboon communication copulation cycle disease displays dominance status ecology estrous feeding field study foraging forest free-ranging frequently fruit geladas gibbons glands Gombe gorilla grooming Group composition habitat hamadryas hamadryas baboons Harlow hectares hierarchy home range hormones howler monkeys howling human infant infection interactions Japanese macaques juveniles laboratory langurs leader male lemurs lifeways meters mother move movements nonhuman primates observer occur offspring Old World olfactory one-male ordinary males Papio particularly patas monkey pattern percent plants play population predation primate behavior primates primatologists prosimians records relationships reproductive response rhesus monkeys role savanna sexual dimorphism signals sleeping social behavior social organization species spider monkeys Struhsaker study area subgroups subleaders Tikal tion trees troop variability vervet monkeys vocalizations Washoe