Motherhood in human and nonhuman primates : biosocial determinants
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Bibliographic Information
Motherhood in human and nonhuman primates : biosocial determinants
Karger, 1995
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Edited by two biological anthropologists and a child psychiatrist, this book is the outcome of an international symposium on fundamental and clinical aspects of primate motherhood. Specialists in the fields of anthropology, ethology, psychology and psychiatry present a wealth of new theory and experimental evidence on the biological and social determinants of mother-hood in human and nonhuman primates. Even more importantly, the successful comparison of evidence gives the reader a clearer picture than has ever before been available. This integration provides a novel framework against which the etiological regulation and dysfunction of the mother-infant relationship in all primates can be better understood and diagnosed.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: determinants of motherhood in human and nonhuman primates - a biosocial model, C.R. Pryce. Part 1 Mother-infant behaviour as a life-history strategy: phylogenetic aspects of primate reproduction - the context of advanced maternal care, R.D. Martin
- evolution and adaptive significance of hominid maternal behaviour, R. Foley
- ecological and social correlates of maternal expenditure on infant growth in haplorhine primates, C. Ross and A. MacLarnon
- influence of ecology and energetics on primate mothers and infants, P. Lee and J. Bowman
- maternal styles in old world primates - their adaptive significance, M. Gomendio. Part 2 Causes and correlates of mother-infant behaviour: neurochemical changes accompanying the reproductive process - their significance for maternal care in primates and other mammals, B.E. Keverne
- prepartum sex steroid hormones and infant-directed behaviour in primiparous marmoset mothers (callithrix jacchus), C.R. Pryce et al
- experiential and hormonal correlates of care-giving in rhesus monkeys, S.D. Holman and R.W. Goy
- environmental factors and hormones - their significance for maternal behaviour in captive gorillas, N.I. Bahr
- sensory and hormonal control of maternal behaviour in rat and human mothers, A.S. Fleming et al
- maternal personality, marital quality, social support and infant temperament - their significance for infant-mother attachment in human families, J. Belsky et al
- risk factors for child abuse and neglect in human parents - a review of the literature and a single institution experience, D.S. Halperin
- postnatal depression in primate mothers - a human problem?, J.L. Cox. Part 3 Consequences of maternal well-being and behaviour for infant development: maternal exposure to stress during pregnancy - its significance for infant behaviour in pigtail macaques (macaca nemestrina), J.M. Worlein and G.P. Sackett
- significance of social attachment in primate infants - the infant-caregiver relationship and volition, G.W. Kraemer
- failure to thrive in human infants - the significance of maternal well-being, D. Skuse et al.
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