“…On the other hand, affiliative interaction between one of the opponents and an individual who is not involved in the conflict, namely a bystander, was also found in chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes , de Waal & van Roosmalen, ). Post‐conflict bystander affiliation or triadic post‐conflict affiliation (Koski & Sterck, ) has recently gained attention in monkeys (McFarland & Majolo, ; Palagi, Dall'Olio, Demuru, & Stanyon, ) and a variety of non‐primate species (Cordoni & Palagi, ; Cozzi, Sighieri, Gazzano, Nicol, & Baragli, ; Ikkatai, Watanabe, & Izawa, ; Yamamoto et al., ). The proposed functions of bystander affiliation in primates, that is, substitute for reconciliation (Judge, ), consolation (de Waal & van Roosmalen, ) and self‐protection for combatants (Romero, Colmenares, & Aureli, ; Watts, ), are not mutually exclusive (Fraser, Koski, Wittig, & Aureli, ).…”