Boccia M L, Scanlan J M, Laudenslager M L, Berger C L, Hijazi A S, Reite M L
Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, USA.
Physiol Behav. 1997 Feb;61(2):191-8. doi: 10.1016/s0031-9384(96)00370-8.
Individual differences in the response to maternal separation in nonhuman primate infants have been attributed to (among other variables) presence or absence of processes that may model social support in humans. Alternative attachments to other members of the social group buffer the infant against a depressive response to maternal separation. This hypothesis was tested in a group of bonnet macaques by manipulating the presence or absence of alternative juvenile attachment figures (friends) during separation. Infants who retained such attachments showed fewer behavioral evidences of depression when separated from their mothers. These infants without friends also showed changes in lymphocyte activation by mitogens or natural cytotoxicity that were not evident in the infants with juvenile friends. Across all separated infants, natural cytotoxicity was positively correlated with juvenile affiliative behavior directed toward the infants during the separation. These results support the hypothesis that social support, available from alternative attachments, can modulate the response to loss, and can account for some of the individual differences seen in these responses.
非人类灵长类动物幼崽对母婴分离反应的个体差异(在其他变量中)被归因于是否存在可能模拟人类社会支持的过程。与社会群体中其他成员形成的替代性依恋会缓冲幼崽对母婴分离的抑郁反应。通过在分离期间操控是否存在替代性幼年依恋对象(朋友),在一群冠毛猕猴中对这一假设进行了测试。与母亲分离时,保留此类依恋关系的幼崽表现出的抑郁行为迹象更少。这些没有朋友的幼崽在受到丝裂原刺激或自然细胞毒性作用时,淋巴细胞激活情况也出现了变化,而这在有幼年朋友的幼崽中并不明显。在所有分离的幼崽中,自然细胞毒性与分离期间针对幼崽的幼年亲和行为呈正相关。这些结果支持了这样一种假设,即来自替代性依恋的社会支持可以调节对丧失的反应,并可以解释这些反应中出现的一些个体差异。