Play behaviour is common across mammals, but it is particularly frequent in primates. Several explanations for the occurrence of play have been proposed, both adaptive and nonadaptive. One popular explanation is that play supports the development of complex cognition and behavioural flexibility. This hypothesis is supported by a relationship between the relative size of several brain regions, including the neocortex and cerebellum, and the frequency of social play. However, a direct link with either behavioural flexibility or brain maturation has yet to be shown. Using a comparative data set of the frequency of social and nonsocial play across primates, I tested two predictions of this hypothesis: (1) that the frequency of play is associate...
The ability to inhibit previously employed strategies and flexibly adjust behavioural responses to e...
Play is an important part of normal childhood development and is seen in varied forms among many mam...
This work was conducted while the first author held a Humboldt Research Fellowship for Postdoctoral ...
Primates are some of the most playful animals in the natural world, yet the reason for this remains ...
This thesis considers the evolution of play behaviour, focusing on comparative analyses of extant pr...
Play is one of the most difficult behaviors to quantify and for this reason, its study has had a ver...
Baboons were observed in two British safari parks for 15 and 3 months. Quantitative data, on the fre...
Funding: European Research Council Advanced Grant “Evoculture” 232823 (K.N.L.), John Templeton Found...
Explanations for primate brain expansion and the evolution of human cognition and culture remain con...
Recent studies clearly indicate that animal play is an important behavioral phenotype, and that deta...
Life history theory predicts that animals whose activities impose time, energy or survivorship costs...
Funding: John Templeton Foundation.In recent decades, an accelerating research effort has exploited ...
Play is ephemeral and versatile. Probably for this reason it is so diffi cult to study systematicall...
Play behaviour reinforces social affiliation in several primate species, including humans. Via a co...
The ability to inhibit previously employed strategies and flexibly adjust behavioural responses to e...
The ability to inhibit previously employed strategies and flexibly adjust behavioural responses to e...
Play is an important part of normal childhood development and is seen in varied forms among many mam...
This work was conducted while the first author held a Humboldt Research Fellowship for Postdoctoral ...
Primates are some of the most playful animals in the natural world, yet the reason for this remains ...
This thesis considers the evolution of play behaviour, focusing on comparative analyses of extant pr...
Play is one of the most difficult behaviors to quantify and for this reason, its study has had a ver...
Baboons were observed in two British safari parks for 15 and 3 months. Quantitative data, on the fre...
Funding: European Research Council Advanced Grant “Evoculture” 232823 (K.N.L.), John Templeton Found...
Explanations for primate brain expansion and the evolution of human cognition and culture remain con...
Recent studies clearly indicate that animal play is an important behavioral phenotype, and that deta...
Life history theory predicts that animals whose activities impose time, energy or survivorship costs...
Funding: John Templeton Foundation.In recent decades, an accelerating research effort has exploited ...
Play is ephemeral and versatile. Probably for this reason it is so diffi cult to study systematicall...
Play behaviour reinforces social affiliation in several primate species, including humans. Via a co...
The ability to inhibit previously employed strategies and flexibly adjust behavioural responses to e...
The ability to inhibit previously employed strategies and flexibly adjust behavioural responses to e...
Play is an important part of normal childhood development and is seen in varied forms among many mam...
This work was conducted while the first author held a Humboldt Research Fellowship for Postdoctoral ...