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  2. Social grooming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_grooming

    In primates, laughter and social grooming trigger opioid release in the brain, which is thought to form and maintain social bonds. [77] In a study performed on rhesus monkeys , lactating females with 4- to 10-week-old infants were given low doses of naloxone , an opioid antagonist that blocks the opioid receptor and inhibits the effects of ...

  3. Wikipedia : Featured picture candidates/Social grooming

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Social_grooming

    Surprisingly, this is the only video we have of this behavior in primates and one of only three videos we have showing social grooming behavior in any animals. This was promoted at commons a few days ago. Articles in which this image appears Social grooming FP category for this image Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Animals/Mammals Creator Frank ...

  4. Primate sociality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primate_sociality

    Primate sociality. Group of bonobos relaxing and grooming. Primate sociality is an area of primatology that aims to study the interactions between three main elements of a primate social network: the social organisation, the social structure and the mating system. The intersection of these three structures describe the socially complex ...

  5. Animal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_communication

    Touch is widely used for social integration, a use that is typified by the social grooming of one animal by another. Social grooming has several functions; it removes parasites and debris from the groomed animal, it reaffirms the social bond or hierarchical relationship between the animals, and it gives the groomer an opportunity to examine ...

  6. Primate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primate

    Within a social group there is a balance between cooperation and competition. Cooperative behaviors in many primates species include social grooming (removing skin parasites and cleaning wounds), food sharing, and collective defense against predators or of a territory. Aggressive behaviors often signal competition for food, sleeping sites or mates.

  7. Personal grooming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_grooming

    Many social animals adapt preening and grooming behaviors for other social purposes such as bonding and the strengthening of social structures.Grooming plays a particularly important role in forming social bonds in many primate species, such as chacma baboons and wedge-capped capuchins.

  8. Animal culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_culture

    In the study of social transmissions, one of the important unanswered questions is an explanation of how and why maladaptive social traditions are maintained. For example, in one study [ citation needed ] on social transmission in guppies ( Poecilia reticulata ), naïve fish preferred taking a long, energetically costly route to a feeder that ...

  9. Grooming claw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grooming_claw

    A grooming claw (or toilet claw) is the specialized claw or nail on the foot of certain primates, used for personal grooming. All prosimians have a grooming claw, but the digit that is specialized in this manner varies. [1] Tarsiers have a grooming claw on second and third toes.