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Monkeys provide models of child abuse.


Some parents neglect or physically harm their young. Their abuse of helpless offspring mirrors the practices of other adults In their families, reflects hostile or emotionally ambivalent parenting styles Parenting style is a psychological construct representing standard strategies parents use in raising their children.

One of the best known theories of parenting style was developed by Diana Baumrind.
, and intensifies in response to various types of social stress.

Such parents are more than dangerous--they're monkeys. Evidence of links between maltreatment maltreatment Social medicine Any of a number of types of unreasonable interactions with another adult. See Child maltreatment, Cf Child abuse.  of their young among monkeys and people suggests that nonhuman primates nonhuman primate

see primate.
 hold great promise as models for investigating this poorly understood behavior, say two psychologists who study monkey families. Their review of research in this area appears in the May Psychological Bulletin.

"Promising animal models of [child maltreatment child maltreatment '…intentional harm or threat of harm to a child by someone acting in the role of a caretaker, for even a short time…Categories Physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, neglect…', the last being most common. ] are already available, and new ones can and must be developed," hold Dario Maestripieri of Yerkes, Regional Primate Research Center in Lawrenceville, Ga., and Kelly A. Carroll of Berry College Berry College is an accredited, private, four-year liberal arts college located in Mount Berry, Georgia, USA, in Floyd County just north of Rome, Georgia. The institution emphasizes the importance of educating the whole person.  In Rome, Ga.

Records extending over 35 years at Yerkes indicate that, in both pigtail A cable that has an appropriate connector on one end and loose wires on the other. It is designed to patch into an existing line or to terminate the ends of a long run. Contrast with patch cord.  macaques and sooty mangabeys, 5 percent of infants are abandoned by their mothers and another 5 percent to 10 percent suffer severe physical abuse from their mothers, the scientists report. These conservative estimates roughly match neglect and abuse rates in human populations, they say.

In group-living monkeys such as macaques and mangabeys mangabeys

dark-colored, long-snouted Old World monkeys with a wide distribution and common as zoo specimens, e.g. crested mangabey (Cercocebus albigena).
, neglect and abuse rarely occur together and may represent separate phenomena, Maestripieri and Carroll argue. Neglect typically takes place among young, inexperienced mothers that abandon only one child, usually the first-born, as an infant. In contrast, abusive mothers span a wide age range and frequently harm successive offspring. Abusive monkey mothers, which also tend to exhibit overprotectiveness and rejection, invest considerable time and energy in their infants. This parenting pattern often runs in families, report Maestripieri and Carroll.

Social stress, such as experiencing low status, clearly evokes infant abuse in pigtail macaques, they add. This species, known for its sensitivity to environmental changes, may provide a good model for investigating the effects of social stress on abusive human parents, the researchers propose.

Monkeys might help illuminate human child neglect, but the diverse forms and causes of child abuse in human societies probably do not have counterparts in nonhuman primates, argues primatologist William A. Mason of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905.  in an accompanying comment.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Bower, Bruce
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:May 23, 1998
Words:360
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