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Sex differences in the response to social stimuli in young chicks
30
Citations
13
References
1989
Year
Breeding BehaviorFitnessIndividual DifferencesEducationSocial SciencesPsychologyGender StudiesSex DifferencesComparative PsychologyBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceYoung ChicksBehavioral SyndromeAbstract Ambulation LatenciesSex DifferenceExperimental PsychologySexual BehaviorBehavioural PhysiologySocial StimuliAnimal BehaviourSocial BehaviorAmbulation LatenciesIsolation Ambulation LatenciesSexual PsychophysiologyAnimal Behavior
Abstract Ambulation latencies of pair-reared 6-day-old male and female chicks were measured (i) in the presence of a cagemate; (ii) in the presence of an unfamiliar chick; (iii) in isolated chicks. Results showed that a) in animals tested with a cagemate there were no differences in ambulation latencies between males and females; b) in animals tested with an unfamiliar chick ambulation latencies were higher in females than in males; c) in animals tested in isolation ambulation latencies were higher in males than in females. It is suggested that gender effects in the open-field behaviour of young chicks might be due to a stronger social reinstatement motivation in females than in males. Keywords: open-fieldsocial discriminationsex differenceschick
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