2024
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.0984
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Facial expressivity in dominant macaques is linked to group cohesion

J. Whitehouse,
P. R. Clark,
R. L. Robinson
et al.

Abstract: Social living affords primates (including humans) many benefits. Communication has been proposed to be the key mechanism used to bond social connections, which could explain why primates have evolved such expressive faces. We assessed whether the facial expressivity of the dominant male (quantified from the coding of anatomically based facial movement) was related to social network properties (based on social proximity and grooming) in nine groups of captive rhesus macaques ( Macaca mulatta … Show more

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