1987
DOI: 10.1163/156853987x00378
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Growing Independence, Conflict and Learning in Mother-Infant Relations in Free-Ranging Chimpanzees

Abstract: Several investigators discussed the need to know more about conditions which facilitate normal human development, especially the need for a better understanding of the processes at work during the development towards greater independence in normal and pathogenic human relationships. The study reported in this paper aims to provide a description of the processes at work during the development of contact- and distance regulation for free-living chimpanzee mother-infant relationships. We believe that such an etho… Show more

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Cited by 122 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Infant chimpanzees are able to begin eating solid foods at about 6 mo of age (36,62). The onset of independent feeding in larger primates likely occurs when mothers can no longer supply all the calories the growing infant needs (63,64), although mothers still provide the majority of infant nutrition for quite some time (65) and provide an important buffer against resource scarcity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infant chimpanzees are able to begin eating solid foods at about 6 mo of age (36,62). The onset of independent feeding in larger primates likely occurs when mothers can no longer supply all the calories the growing infant needs (63,64), although mothers still provide the majority of infant nutrition for quite some time (65) and provide an important buffer against resource scarcity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infants only begin traveling under their own power more than they are carried by their mother around the age of 3.5 y (48). Infants begin eating solid foods by 6 mo of age (49) yet remain nutritionally dependent upon their mother until they are weaned between 4 and 5 y old (50,51).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maternal encouragement of early infant locomotion has been observed in both Old World monkeys and the great apes (Maestripieri, 1995b(Maestripieri, , 1996, but the observations of this phenomenon in the great apes are mostly qualitative (e.g., chimpanzees, Nicolson, 1977;van de Rijt-Plooij & Plooij, 1987;Yerkes & Tomilin, 1935;gorillas, Hess, 1973;Whiten, 1999). Some qualitative observations of maternal encouragement or discouragement of infant behavior have also been made in the context of food sharing and processing, tool use, or social communication, particularly in the great apes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%