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Psychological stressor caused alpha-male non-human-primate Macaca fascicularis to become agonistic when struggling over food
Author(s) -
Rosyid Ridlo Al Hakim,
Erie Kolya Nasution
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of psychological perspective
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2715-4807
DOI - 10.47679/jopp.311152021
Subject(s) - juvenile , agonistic behaviour , adult male , primate , psychology , stressor , alpha (finance) , nonhuman primate , developmental psychology , aggression , clinical psychology , biology , ecology , endocrinology , construct validity , neuroscience , psychometrics , evolutionary biology
Primates are the object of increased research recently. Experiments on non-human-primates (NHP) can determine their psychological level. NHP Macaca fascicularis is a primate that lives socially with a social hierarchy. Alpha-male becomes the leader of the group. Beneficial access is higher in alpha-male, against the conflicts to be initiated for certain interests. This study provides an overview of alpha-male aggressiveness in groups based on psychological stressors obtained during field observations. The research was conducted at Mbah Agung Karangbanar Religious Tourism Park, Central Java, Indonesia, group-size of 12 adult male, 14 adult female, 8 sub-adult male, 9 sub-adult female, 10 juvenile male, 14 juvenile female, and 6 infants. Aggressive observation (sampling-rules) is behavioral-animal sampling on alpha-male individuals and one individual for each age group as the subject of observation. Observations were carried out for 8 days with one-zero sampling. Adult male and alpha-male aggressive behavior ranked the highest during observation, that psychological stressors obtained.

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