Search results for "Macaca fuscata"

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Is female-male mounting functional? An analysis of the temporal patterns of sexual behaviors in Japanese macaques

2019

Abstract In certain populations of Japanese macaques, adult females mount adult males in the context of heterosexual consortships (i.e., temporary but exclusive sexual associations between a male and a female). Previous research suggested that, in this primate species, female-male mounting (FMM) may be a behavioral adaptation. This functional hypothesis holds that FMM is a (special) courtship behaviour, or a (super) sexual solicitation, that serves the function of focusing the male's attention, preventing him from moving away, and expediting male-female mounting, in the context of high female competition for male mates. In this study, we aimed to test some of the proposed functional feature…

MaleFunctional featuresExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Settore BIO/09 - FisiologiaTemporal structureMacaca fuscataDevelopmental psychologySexual Behavior Animal03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineNon-conceptive sexbiology.animalEvolutionary by-productAnimalsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPrimate050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyAdaptationMatingHeterosexualityBehavioral adaptationStructure-functionCourtship displaybiology05 social sciencesT-pattern analysiSexual PartnersSexual behaviorMacacaFemaleAdaptationPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhysiology & Behavior
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Data from: Mechanisms of reciprocity and diversity in social networks: a modelling and comparative approach

2018

Three mechanisms have been proposed to underlie reciprocation of social behaviors in gregarious animals: ‘calculated reciprocity’, ‘emotional bookkeeping’ and ‘symmetry-based reciprocity’. Among these explanations, emotional book-keeping has received the broadest support from experimental and observational studies. On the other hand, three individual-based models have shown that reciprocation may emerge via ‘symmetry-based reciprocity’, ‘emotional bookkeeping’, or a combination of both mechanisms. Here we use these three models to assess their relative fit with empirical data on reciprocation and social network structure across different groups and species of macaques. We collected grooming…

medicine and health careMacaca fascicularisMacaca radiatamacaquesMacaca tonkeanaMacaca sylvanusMacaca arctoidesMacaca assamensisLife SciencesMedicineMacaca mulattaMacaca fuscata
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