Suomi S J
Child Dev. 1977 Dec;48(4):1254-70.
Adult male rhesus monkeys were housed in nuclear families containing adult female mates, offspring, and other infants and adults. Behaviors exhibited by the adult males were recorded 4 days per week over a 37-month period; in interactions involving other monkeys, the identity and the responses of those participants were also recorded. The results indicated that, although adult males were less active and more stable in their behavioral levels than mates or offspring, they clearly distributed both initiates and responses differently to male offspring, female offspring, mates, and both infant and adult monkeys from other families. These results suggest that adult males have the potential to play more important roles in the social development of infants than had been previously suspected on the basis of field data. Implications for human father-infant interactions are discussed.
成年雄性恒河猴被安置在由成年雌性配偶、后代以及其他婴幼儿和成年个体组成的核心家庭中。在37个月的时间里,每周记录成年雄性猴子4天的行为表现;在涉及其他猴子的互动中,还记录了这些参与者的身份和反应。结果表明,尽管成年雄性猴子在行为水平上比配偶或后代活跃度更低、更稳定,但它们对雄性后代、雌性后代、配偶以及来自其他家庭的婴幼儿和成年猴子的发起行为和反应的分配显然有所不同。这些结果表明,成年雄性猴子在婴儿社交发展中可能发挥比根据实地数据先前推测的更为重要的作用。文中还讨论了对人类父子互动的启示。