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The role of contingent reciprocity a...
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University of California, Los Angeles.
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The role of contingent reciprocity and market exchange in the lives of female olive baboons.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The role of contingent reciprocity and market exchange in the lives of female olive baboons./
Author:
Frank, Rebecca Ellen.
Description:
119 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Joan B. Silk.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International69-03A.
Subject:
Anthropology, Physical. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3304666
ISBN:
9780549505990
The role of contingent reciprocity and market exchange in the lives of female olive baboons.
Frank, Rebecca Ellen.
The role of contingent reciprocity and market exchange in the lives of female olive baboons.
- 119 p.
Adviser: Joan B. Silk.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2007.
The goal of this project was to examine the dynamics of exchange among female baboons and test predictions derived from a biological market model of grooming. Evolutionary theory predicts that cooperation among nonkin will be limited to reciprocating partners who monitor the balance of trade within their relationships in order to prevent cheating. But primates may be cognitively limited to negotiating balanced reciprocity over very short time scales. If so, then trade might be regulated in a biological market, where supply and demand determines the value of an exchange, and individuals choose to trade with the partner offering the highest value. Individuals maximize their immediate benefits without having to monitor the balance of their exchanges over time. When demand for a partner or commodity is greater than the supply, individuals compete for access to the preferred partner by raising the price they are willing to pay. Applied to primate grooming exchanges, a market model predicts that females will balance the amount of grooming they trade within single bouts when all partners offer similar value. In some cases, partners can offer other valuable benefits and will trade those with who ever offers the most grooming in return. Thus, females are predicted to trade grooming for access to resources when feeding competition is elevated and rank differences translate to differential foraging success. Females are also predicted to trade grooming with mothers of young infants in exchange for access to the infant. I tested these predictions in a group of 16 adult female olive baboons in Chololo, Kenya. In this troop, females only reciprocated within the same grooming bout 34% of the time and balanced their grooming more evenly over many bouts than within single bouts. Non-mothers preferentially groomed mothers of young infants, but did not compete for access to infants by raising their grooming offers to mothers as the availability of infants declined. When feeding conflict within dyads was high, females provided additional grooming to their higher ranking partners, but they do not spend more time co-feeding in return. These results suggest that female baboons are capable of monitoring their exchanges over time and can trade across some currencies, but it is not clear that market pricing explains the observed patterning of exchange.
ISBN: 9780549505990Subjects--Topical Terms:
877524
Anthropology, Physical.
The role of contingent reciprocity and market exchange in the lives of female olive baboons.
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Adviser: Joan B. Silk.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 69-03, Section: A, page: 1045.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2007.
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The goal of this project was to examine the dynamics of exchange among female baboons and test predictions derived from a biological market model of grooming. Evolutionary theory predicts that cooperation among nonkin will be limited to reciprocating partners who monitor the balance of trade within their relationships in order to prevent cheating. But primates may be cognitively limited to negotiating balanced reciprocity over very short time scales. If so, then trade might be regulated in a biological market, where supply and demand determines the value of an exchange, and individuals choose to trade with the partner offering the highest value. Individuals maximize their immediate benefits without having to monitor the balance of their exchanges over time. When demand for a partner or commodity is greater than the supply, individuals compete for access to the preferred partner by raising the price they are willing to pay. Applied to primate grooming exchanges, a market model predicts that females will balance the amount of grooming they trade within single bouts when all partners offer similar value. In some cases, partners can offer other valuable benefits and will trade those with who ever offers the most grooming in return. Thus, females are predicted to trade grooming for access to resources when feeding competition is elevated and rank differences translate to differential foraging success. Females are also predicted to trade grooming with mothers of young infants in exchange for access to the infant. I tested these predictions in a group of 16 adult female olive baboons in Chololo, Kenya. In this troop, females only reciprocated within the same grooming bout 34% of the time and balanced their grooming more evenly over many bouts than within single bouts. Non-mothers preferentially groomed mothers of young infants, but did not compete for access to infants by raising their grooming offers to mothers as the availability of infants declined. When feeding conflict within dyads was high, females provided additional grooming to their higher ranking partners, but they do not spend more time co-feeding in return. These results suggest that female baboons are capable of monitoring their exchanges over time and can trade across some currencies, but it is not clear that market pricing explains the observed patterning of exchange.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3304666
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