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Individual differences in freezing and cortisol in infant and mother rhesus monkeys.
143
Citations
13
References
1998
Year
Animal PhysiologyPsychoneuroimmunologyBehavioral SciencesStress HormoneBasal Cortisol LevelsBehavioral NeurosciencePhysiologyCortisol LevelsIndividual DifferencesMother Rhesus MonkeysSocial SciencesNeuroscienceCortisol LevelPrimate BehaviorPublic HealthAnimal BehaviorPsychologyComparative Physiology
Freezing is an adaptive defensive behavior that is expressed in response to an imminent threat. In prior studies with rhesus monkeys, stable individual differences in animals' propensities to freeze have been demonstrated. To understand the factors associated with these individual differences, freezing behavior was examined in infant rhesus monkeys and their mothers, in conjunction with levels of the stress-related hormone cortisol. In both mothers and infants, basal cortisol levels were positively correlated with freezing duration. Additionally, the number of offspring a mother had was negatively correlated with her infant's cortisol level. These findings suggest a link between basal cortisol levels and an animal's propensity to freeze, as well as a mechanism by which maternal experience may affect infants' cortisol levels.
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