ECOLOGIES OF EXPERIENCE: THE TEMPORAL PLACE OF CHACMA BABOONS IN LIGHT OF ALBERT AND KESSLER

Authors

  • Thompson Elias Reuben Institute of Human Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15437038

Keywords:

Leave-Taking, Interaction, Baboon, Separation, Evolution

Abstract

Although leave-taking in non-human species has been preliminarily investigated in a few species, the mechanisms driving encounter ends remain unstudied. In 1976 Albert and Kessler published a landmark paper, outlining theories about what drives social encounter ends and providing a framework of internal and external motivations leading to separation. This framework has been underused in aiding our understanding of how proximate mechanisms for separation drive leave-taking and offers a valuable opportunity to better understand how separation and behavior relate to one another. Having previously identified leave-taking in wild chacma baboons (Papio ursinus), in the current paper, we apply this framework to their leave-taking to better understand how the motivations to leave impact leave-taking. Using GLMMs with binomial error structure, our results suggest that internal motivations to end interactions are better predictors of orientation-shifting behavior when compared to external motivations. We argue that these results validate the use of Albert and Kessler's framework across species and suggest that leave-taking may have evolved to signal internal drivers of interaction ends, a behavior that has become elaborated in human behavior

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Published

2025-05-19

How to Cite

Thompson, E. R. (2025). ECOLOGIES OF EXPERIENCE: THE TEMPORAL PLACE OF CHACMA BABOONS IN LIGHT OF ALBERT AND KESSLER . Humanities and Social Sciences Research Journal, 13(1), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15437038

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Articles