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Understanding Behavior: What Primate Studies Tell Us About Human Behavior

Editat de James D. Loy, Calvin B. Peters
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 mai 1991
Scientific studies of monkeys, apes, and other nonhuman primates began just over 50 years ago. Since then tens of thousands of hours of observation have been made on these animals in the wild and in captivity. The chief rationale for scientific primatology has always been the belief that important insights into human behaviour and society could be gained through studies of our evolutionary kin.This book reviews what we have learned. Distinguished researchers outline primatological insights in six areas: sex, parenting, behavioural development, aggression/dominance, culture and kinship. The chapters show how primates have been used as simplified models of human behaviour and how they have contributed to scenarios of human evolution. Lay readers, students, and specialists alike will find this a readable and useful compendium of the findings of scientific primatology. Covering topics from orgasm to ontogeny, parental investment to penis size, and kinship to culture, this book summarizes what studying monkeys and apes has taught us about ourselves.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780195060201
ISBN-10: 0195060202
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: halftones and tables throughout
Dimensiuni: 162 x 241 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

James D. Loy & Calvin Peters: Mortifying reflections: primatology and the human disciplines; Nancy A. Nicholson: Maternal behavior in human and nonhuman primates; David Taub & Patrick Mehlman: Primate paternalistic investment: a cross-species view; Janice Chism: Ontogeny of behavior in humans and non human primates: the search for common ground; Linda D. Wolfe: Human evolution and the sexual behavior of female primates; Ronald D. Nadler & Charles H. Phoenix: Male sexual behavior: monkeys, men, and apes; Bernard Chapais: Primates and the origins of aggression, power and politics among humans; Donald Stone Sade: Kinship; Calvin B. Peters: Ape, humans, and culture: what primatological discourse tells us about ourselves.

Recenzii

'Lay readers, students, and specialists alike will find this a readable and useful compendium of the findings of scientific primatology.'Ethology, Ecology & Evolution No. 4, Vol. 3, 1991
'An authoritative set of reviews ... All will be useful to students and research workers.'ASLIB Booklist, Vol.36, No.11, November 1991