A 2007 paper in Proceedings of the Royal Society B concluded that
wild rhesus macaques can understand human gestures indicating the...
Not exact matches
Hauser himself, a professor of psychology, human evolutionary biology, and organismic and evolutionary biology at Harvard and codirector of the school's Mind / Brain / Behavior Initiative, has analyzed the antics of tamarins, vervet monkeys,
macaques, and starlings in captivity, as well as
rhesus monkeys and chimpanzees in the
wild.
In the first, Platt and colleagues looked at the foraging behaviors of
rhesus macaques, a non-human primate species the researchers have studied both in the lab and in the
wild.
In addition, we checked for TMAdV in rectal swab samples from
rhesus macaques housed in the same building as the titi monkeys (n = 26) and in pooled droppings from
wild rodents (n = 2) living near the titi monkey cages.