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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Dec 30, 2025

A Common Marmoset Model of Mother-Infant Intervention for Breastfeeding Disorders in the Presence of Paternal Inhibition and Maternal Neglect
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Location-restricted dyadic interactions and maternal patterns.

Michael W Andrews1, Leonard A Rosenblum1

  • 1Department of Psychiatry, State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn.

American Journal of Primatology
|January 17, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Infant restraint in bonnet macaques (Macaca radiata) reduced mother-infant contact. This nursery-rearing method explored maternal coping strategies under conflicting demands.

Keywords:
bonnet macaquesdyadsforagingnursery rearing

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Area of Science:

  • Primate behavior
  • Ethology
  • Animal social behavior

Background:

  • Mother-infant interactions are crucial for development.
  • Foraging demands can influence maternal care strategies.
  • Understanding primate maternal behavior provides insights into social evolution.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effects of infant restraint on mother-infant interactions.
  • To examine maternal foraging patterns under varying demand and contact conditions.
  • To assess the feasibility of nursery-restrained rearing in bonnet macaques.

Main Methods:

  • Observation of five bonnet macaque mother-infant dyads.
  • Three conditions: high foraging demand-nonrestrained contact (HFD-NRC), high foraging demand-restrained contact (HFD-RC), and low foraging demand-restrained contact (LFD-RC).
  • Infants housed in a nursery during restrained contact conditions, limiting access to mothers.

Main Results:

  • High foraging demand with restrained contact (HFD-RC) decreased dyadic contact compared to HFD-NRC.
  • Foraging task engagement was not significantly affected by HFD-RC, but individual maternal differences were noted.
  • Low foraging demand with restrained contact (LFD-RC) also reduced dyadic contact, with mothers showing lower infant contact initiation.

Conclusions:

  • Nursery-restrained rearing is a feasible method to study maternal coping in bonnet macaques.
  • Infant restraint significantly impacts mother-infant dyadic interactions.
  • Maternal responses to conflicting environmental and social demands vary individually.