J Comp Psychol. 2019 Nov;133(4):451. doi: 10.1037/com0000186. Epub 2019 May 9.
Reports an error in "Embracing in a female-bonded monkey species ()" by Virginia Pallante, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Marco Gamba and Elisabetta Palagi (, Advanced Online Publication, Mar 25, 2019, np). In the article "Embracing in a Female-Bonded Monkey Species ()" by Virginia Pallante, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Marco Gamba, and Elisabetta Palagi (, Advance online publication. March 25, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/ com0000173), the title incorrectly read "Embracing in a Female-Bonded Monkey Specie ()" All versions of this article have been corrected. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2019-15836-001.) In several primate species, including humans, embracing predicts the level of affiliation between subjects. To explore the functional meaning of embracing, we selected Theropithecus gelada as a model species. The basic level of the gelada society is the 1-male unit, and the integrity of the group is maintained by the strong bonds between females. In our study group, we observed 3 different kinds of embracing: the frontal and side embraces involving a face-to-face and chest-to-chest interaction and the posterior embrace that consists in putting the arms around conspecifics' back and posing a cheek on it. We verified that the quality of relationships between subjects predicts the type of embracing. Frontal and side embraces were more frequent between females sharing strong bonds. Posterior embracing was randomly distributed. We found a high level of female embracing among the mothers during the first months of lactation. This may improve female cohesiveness against males, thus reducing the risk of infanticide, which is particularly high in geladas. Embracing seems also to act as an ice-breaker favoring grooming. Female embracing could be an affiliative strategy that has evolved to maintain group integrity and high social cohesion among females, especially mothers. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
报告弗吉尼亚·帕兰特、皮耶尔·弗朗切斯科·法拉利、马尔科·甘巴和伊丽莎白塔·帕拉吉所著的《雌性群居猴类中的拥抱行为》(,高级在线出版物,2019年3月25日,np)存在一处错误。在弗吉尼亚·帕兰特、皮耶尔·弗朗切斯科·法拉利、马尔科·甘巴和伊丽莎白塔·帕拉吉所著的文章《雌性群居猴类中的拥抱行为》(,高级在线出版物。2019年3月25日。http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/com0000173)中,标题错误地写成了“Embracing in a Female-Bonded Monkey Specie ()”。本文的所有版本均已更正。(原始文章的以下摘要出现在记录2019-15836-001中。)在包括人类在内的几种灵长类物种中,拥抱行为预示着个体之间的亲密程度。为了探究拥抱行为的功能意义,我们选择狮尾狒作为模型物种。狮尾狒社会的基本单位是单雄群体,群体的完整性通过雌性之间的紧密联系得以维持。在我们的研究群体中,我们观察到三种不同类型的拥抱:正面拥抱和侧面拥抱,涉及面对面和胸对胸的互动;以及背后拥抱,即双臂环绕同种个体的背部并将脸颊贴在上面。我们证实,个体之间关系的质量预示着拥抱的类型。在关系紧密的雌性之间,正面拥抱和侧面拥抱更为频繁。背后拥抱则是随机分布的。我们发现,在哺乳期的头几个月里,母亲之间存在高水平的雌性拥抱行为。这可能会增强雌性对抗雄性的凝聚力,从而降低杀婴风险,而在狮尾狒中杀婴风险尤其高。拥抱行为似乎还起到了促进梳理毛发的破冰作用。雌性拥抱可能是一种亲密策略,其进化目的是维持群体的完整性以及雌性之间,尤其是母亲之间的高度社会凝聚力。(PsycINFO数据库记录(c)2019美国心理学会,保留所有权利)