University of Chicago Press, 2001 Paper: 978-0-226-01607-8 Library of Congress Classification QL737.P93A39 2001 Dewey Decimal Classification 599.865
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
When it was originally released in 1980, Jeanne Altmann's book transformed the study of maternal primate relationships by focusing on motherhood and infancy within a complex ecological and sociological context. Available again with a new foreword by the author, Baboon Mothers and Infants is a classic book that has been, in its own right, a mother to a generation of influential research and will no doubt provide further inspiration.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Jeanne Altmann is a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology and faculty associate in the Office of Population Research at Princeton University.
REVIEWS
“When this book was first published, it was a landmark in studies of free-ranging primates as well as the first synthetic text on the ecology and behaviour of mothers and infants. It remains as important today as it was 20 years ago, and it is timely to bring it to the attention of a new generation of behavioural ecologists.”
— P.C. Lee, Folia Primatologica
“This book, which looks at motherhood and infancy in baboons, is a classic for those interested in primate infant development, maternal behaviour, mother-infant relationships and social systems.”
— Ethology
“What emerges from the text, but even more forcefully from the case histories, is a feeling for the richness and complexities . . . of the daily lives of baboon mothers and infants. One finishes this book wanting to know how the individual baboons’ stories ended and Altmann provides an update on the fates of some of her subjects. Since this book’s publication other researchers have conducted field studies of primate mothers and infants, but none have been more comprehensive. . . . Altmann’s observations here remain fresh and informative today because of the remarkable full picture she provides of the lives of these mother and infant baboons.”
— Janice Chism, Quarterly Review of Biology
“When it was originally released in 1980, Jeanne Altmann’s book transformed the study of maternal primate relationships by focusing on motherhood and infancy within a complex ecological and sociological context. Available again with a new foreword by the author, this book is a classic one that has been, in its own right, a mother to a generation of influential research and will no doubt provide further inspiration.”
— Ethology, Ecology, and Evolution
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AMBOSELI BABOON RESEARCH
1. INTRODUCTION
2. BABOONS AND THEIR HABITAT
3. METHODS
4. DEMOGRAPHY: BIRTHS, DEATHS, AND
INTERBIRTH INTERVALS
5. ECOLOGY AND MATERNAL TIME BUDGETS
6. SOCIAL MILIEU
7. MATERNAL CARE IN THE POSTNATAL PERIOD
8. INFANT DEVELOPMENT AND MOTHER-INFANT
SPATIAL RELATIONSHIPS
9. WEANING AND INFANT INDEPENDENCE
10. CONCLUSIONS AND SPECULATIONS
APPENDIX 1. Maternal Geneologies in Alto's Group
APPENDIX 2. Selective Case History Descriptions of All
Mother-Infant Dyads with Emphasis on
Adult Male and Kin Associations
APPENDIX 3. Selective Case History Descriptions of All
Adult Males
APPENDIX 4. Behaviors Recorded in This Study and
Analyzed in the Text
APPENDIX 5. Residuals from Linear Regression of Daily
Time Infants Spent in Contact with
Their Mothers at Each Age
REFERENCES
INDEX
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
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Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
University of Chicago Press, 2001 Paper: 978-0-226-01607-8
When it was originally released in 1980, Jeanne Altmann's book transformed the study of maternal primate relationships by focusing on motherhood and infancy within a complex ecological and sociological context. Available again with a new foreword by the author, Baboon Mothers and Infants is a classic book that has been, in its own right, a mother to a generation of influential research and will no doubt provide further inspiration.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Jeanne Altmann is a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology and faculty associate in the Office of Population Research at Princeton University.
REVIEWS
“When this book was first published, it was a landmark in studies of free-ranging primates as well as the first synthetic text on the ecology and behaviour of mothers and infants. It remains as important today as it was 20 years ago, and it is timely to bring it to the attention of a new generation of behavioural ecologists.”
— P.C. Lee, Folia Primatologica
“This book, which looks at motherhood and infancy in baboons, is a classic for those interested in primate infant development, maternal behaviour, mother-infant relationships and social systems.”
— Ethology
“What emerges from the text, but even more forcefully from the case histories, is a feeling for the richness and complexities . . . of the daily lives of baboon mothers and infants. One finishes this book wanting to know how the individual baboons’ stories ended and Altmann provides an update on the fates of some of her subjects. Since this book’s publication other researchers have conducted field studies of primate mothers and infants, but none have been more comprehensive. . . . Altmann’s observations here remain fresh and informative today because of the remarkable full picture she provides of the lives of these mother and infant baboons.”
— Janice Chism, Quarterly Review of Biology
“When it was originally released in 1980, Jeanne Altmann’s book transformed the study of maternal primate relationships by focusing on motherhood and infancy within a complex ecological and sociological context. Available again with a new foreword by the author, this book is a classic one that has been, in its own right, a mother to a generation of influential research and will no doubt provide further inspiration.”
— Ethology, Ecology, and Evolution
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AMBOSELI BABOON RESEARCH
1. INTRODUCTION
2. BABOONS AND THEIR HABITAT
3. METHODS
4. DEMOGRAPHY: BIRTHS, DEATHS, AND
INTERBIRTH INTERVALS
5. ECOLOGY AND MATERNAL TIME BUDGETS
6. SOCIAL MILIEU
7. MATERNAL CARE IN THE POSTNATAL PERIOD
8. INFANT DEVELOPMENT AND MOTHER-INFANT
SPATIAL RELATIONSHIPS
9. WEANING AND INFANT INDEPENDENCE
10. CONCLUSIONS AND SPECULATIONS
APPENDIX 1. Maternal Geneologies in Alto's Group
APPENDIX 2. Selective Case History Descriptions of All
Mother-Infant Dyads with Emphasis on
Adult Male and Kin Associations
APPENDIX 3. Selective Case History Descriptions of All
Adult Males
APPENDIX 4. Behaviors Recorded in This Study and
Analyzed in the Text
APPENDIX 5. Residuals from Linear Regression of Daily
Time Infants Spent in Contact with
Their Mothers at Each Age
REFERENCES
INDEX
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE