“…Nevertheless, due to the genetic, biological, and psychological proximity, nonhuman primates have been preferred as a comparative animal model to understand what triggers early life stress products in humans (Gilmer & McKinney, ; Nelson & Winslow, ). Decades of studies revealed that early impoverished, neglected, and abused primates show long‐term effects on cortical organization (Bogart, Bennett, Schapiro, Reamer, & Hopkins, ), cognitive deficits (Davenport, Rogers, & Rumbaugh, ), greater expression of abnormal and stereotyped behaviors (Birkett & Newton‐Fisher, ; Kalcher‐Sommersguter, Franz‐Schaider, Preuschoft, & Crailsheim, ; Latham & Mason, ), less social and sexual behaviors (Freeman & Ross, ; Kalcher‐Sommersguter et al, ; Llorente, Riba, Ballesta, Feliu, & Rostán, ), attachment disorders (van Ijzendoorn, Bard, Bakermans‐Kranenburg, & Ivan, ), anxiety (Botero, Macdonald, & Miller, ), increased inactivity (Llorente et al, ), neophobia (Ueno & Matsuzawa, ), and higher stress sensitivity (Reimers, Schwarzenberger, & Preuschoft, ), than mother‐reared and normal developed chimpanzees.…”