Symmetry (Sep 2018)

Social Risk Dissociates Social Network Structure across Lateralized Behaviors in Spider Monkeys

  • Emily R. Boeving,
  • Eliza L. Nelson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/sym10090390
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 390

Abstract

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Reports of lateralized behavior are widespread, although the majority of findings have focused on the visual or motor domains. Less is known about laterality with regards to the social domain. We previously observed a left-side bias in two social affiliative behaviors—embrace and face-embrace—in captive Colombian spider monkeys (Ateles fusciceps rufiventris). Here we applied social network analysis to laterality for the first time. Our findings suggest that laterality influences social structure in spider monkeys with structural differences between networks based on direction of behavioral bias and social interaction type. We attribute these network differences to a graded spectrum of social risk comprised of three dimensions.

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