Dario maestripieri



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37. D. Maestripieri

Social communication among captive stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides).



International Journal of Primatology, 17: 785-802, 1996.

38. D. Maestripieri, J. Call

Mother-infant communication in primates.



Advances in the Study of Behavior, 25: 613- 642, 1996.

39. D. Maestripieri, K. Wallen

Affiliative and submissive communication in rhesus macaques.



Primates, 38: 127-138, 1997.

40. D. Maestripieri, K. Wallen, K. A. Carroll

Infant abuse runs in families of group-living pigtail macaques.



Child Abuse & Neglect, 21: 465-471, 1997.

41. D. Maestripieri, K. Wallen, K. A. Carroll

Genealogical and demographic influences on infant abuse and neglect in

group-living sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys).

Developmental Psychobiology, 31: 175-180, 1997.

42. D. Maestripieri

The evolution of communication.



Language & Communication, 17: 269-277, 1997.

43. D. Maestripieri

Gestural communication in macaques: Usage and meaning of nonvocal

signals.

Evolution of Communication, 1: 193-222, 1997.

44. D. Maestripieri

Parenting styles of abusive mothers in group-living rhesus macaques.



Animal Behaviour, 55: 1-11, 1998.

45. D. Maestripieri, K. A. Carroll

Risk factors for infant abuse and neglect in rhesus monkeys.



Psychological Science, 9: 143-145, 1998.

46. M. Tomaszycki, C. Cline, B. Griffin, D. Maestripieri, W. D. Hopkins

Maternal cradling and infant nipple preferences in rhesus macaques.



Developmental Psychobiology, 32: 305-312, 1998.

47. D. Maestripieri, K. A. Carroll

Child abuse and neglect: Usefulness of the animal data.



Psychological Bulletin, 123: 211-223, 1998.

48. K. A. Carroll, D. Maestripieri

Infant maltreatment in monkeys: A discussion of definitions, epidemiology, etiology, and implications for child maltreatment.



Psychological Bulletin, 123: 234-237, 1998.

49. D. Maestripieri

Social and demographic influences on mothering style in pigtail macaques.



Ethology, 104: 379-385, 1998.

50. J. L. Zehr, D. Maestripieri, K. Wallen

Estrogen increases female sexual initiation independent of male

responsiveness in rhesus monkeys.

Hormones and Behavior, 33: 95-103, 1998.

51. D. Maestripieri, K. A. Carroll

Behavioral and environmental correlates of infant abuse in group-living

pigtail macaques.

Infant Behavior & Development, 21: 603-612, 1998.

52. D. Maestripieri

The evolution of male-infant interactions in the tribe Papionini (Primates: Cercopithecidae)



Folia Primatologica, 69: 247-251, 1998.

53. D. Maestripieri, J. L. Zehr

Maternal responsiveness increases during pregnancy and after estrogen treatment in macaques.



Hormones and Behavior, 34: 223-230, 1998.

54. D. Maestripieri

Science, philosophy, and the study of animal minds.



Evolution of Communication, 2: 279-291, 1998.

55. D. Maestripieri

Osservazione, registrazione e definizione delle relazioni madre-figlio nei primati non umani.

In: Tecniche di Osservazione del Comportamento Infantile. Ed. by A. Tartabini, Milano: McGraw-Hill, pp. 37-51, 1998.

56. D. Maestripieri

The biology of human parenting: Insights from nonhuman primates.



Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 23: 411-422, 1999.

57. D. Maestripieri, M. Tomaszycki, K.A. Carroll

Consistency and change in the behavior of rhesus macaque abusive mothers with successive infants.



Developmental Psychobiology, 34: 29-35, 1999.

58. D. Maestripieri

Formal dominance: The emperor's new clothes?



Journal of Comparative Psychology, 113: 96-98, 1999.

59. D. Maestripieri, K.A. Carroll

Costs and benefits of female aggressiveness in humans and other mammals.



Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 22: 231-232, 1999.

60. D. Maestripieri

Fatal attraction: interest in infants and infant abuse in rhesus macaques.



American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 110: 17-25, 1999.

61. D. Maestripieri

Changes in social behavior and its hormonal correlates across pregnancy in pig-

tailed macaques.

International Journal of Primatology, 20: 707-718, 1999.

62. D. Maestripieri

Primate social organization, gestural repertoire size, and communication dynamics: a comparative study of macaques.

In: The Origins of Language. What Nonhuman Primates Can Tell Us.

Ed. by B. J. King, Santa Fe: School of American Research, pp. 55-77, 1999.



63. D. Maestripieri, K. A. Carroll

Causes and consequences of infant abuse and neglect in monkeys.



Aggression and Violent Behavior, 5: 245-254, 2000.

64. D. Maestripieri, T. Jovanovic, H. Gouzoules

Crying and infant abuse in rhesus monkeys.



Child Development, 71: 301-309, 2000.

65. D. Maestripieri, N. L. Megna, T. Jovanovic

Adoption and maltreatment of foster infants by rhesus macaque abusive mothers.



Developmental Science, 3: 287-293, 2000.

66. D. Maestripieri

Determinants of affiliative interactions between adult males and lactating females in pigtail macaques.



Ethology, 106: 425-439, 2000.

67. S. Cabib, F. R. D’Amato, S. Puglisi-Allegra, D. Maestripieri

Behavioral and mesocorticolimbic dopamine responses to non aggressive social interactions depend on previous social experiences and on the opponent's sex.



Behavioural Brain Research, 112: 13-22, 2000.

68. D. Maestripieri

Measuring temperament in rhesus macaques: consistency and change in emotionality over time.



Behavioural Processes, 49: 167-171, 2000.

69. T. Jovanovic, N. L. Megna, D. Maestripieri

Early maternal recognition of offspring vocalizations in rhesus macaques

(Macaca mulatta).

Primates, 41: 421-428, 2000.

70. D. Maestripieri, N. L. Megna

Hormones and behavior in abusive and nonabusive rhesus macaque mothers. 1: Social interactions during late pregnancy and early lactation.



Physiology & Behavior, 71: 35-42, 2000.

71. D. Maestripieri, N. L. Megna

Hormones and behavior in abusive and nonabusive rhesus macaque mothers. 2: Mother-infant interactions.



Physiology & Behavior, 71: 43-49, 2000.

72. D. Maestripieri

Biography.



American Psychologist, 55: 1274-1276, 2000.

73. D. Maestripieri

Is there mother-infant bonding in primates?



Developmental Review, 21: 93-120, 2001.

74. D. Maestripieri

Female-biased maternal investment in rhesus macaques.



Folia Primatologica, 72: 44-47, 2001.

75. D. Maestripieri

Intraspecific variability in parenting styles of rhesus macaques: the role of the social environment.



Ethology, 107: 237-248, 2001.

76. D. Maestripieri

Biological bases of maternal attachment.



Current Directions in Psychological Science, 10: 79-83, 2001.

77. D. Maestripieri, J. Whitham

Teaching in marine mammals? Anecdotes vs science.



Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 24: 342-343, 2001.

78. D. Maestripieri, P. M. Kappeler

Evolutionary theory and primate behavior.



International Journal of Primatology, 23: 703-705, 2002.

79. D. Maestripieri

Parent-offspring conflict in primates.



International Journal of Primatology, 23: 923-951, 2002.

80. F. C. Graves, K. Wallen, D. Maestripieri

Opioids and attachment in rhesus macaque abusive mothers.



Behavioral Neuroscience, 116: 489-493, 2002.

81. D. Maestripieri

Maternal dominance rank and age affect offspring sex ratio in pigtail macaques.



Journal of Mammalogy, 83: 563-568, 2002.

82. D. Maestripieri, S. Pelka

Sex differences in interest in infants across the lifespan: A biological adaptation for parenting?



Human Nature, 13: 327-344, 2002.

83. D. Maestripieri, S. K. Ross, N. L. Megna

Mother-infant interactions in western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla): spatial relationships, communication, and opportunities for social learning.



Journal of Comparative Psychology, 116: 219-227, 2002.

84. J. R. Roney, D. Maestripieri

The importance of comparative and phylogenetic analyses in the study of

adaptation.

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 25: 525, 2002.

85. D. Maestripieri

Biological bases of maternal attachment.

In: Foundations in Social Neuroscience. Ed. By J. T. Cacioppo,

G. G. Berntson, R. Adolphs, C. S. Carter, R. J. Davidson, M. K. McClintock, B. S. McEwen, M. J. Meaney, D. L. Schacter, E. M. Sternberg, S. J. Suomi, S. E. Taylor. MIT Press, pp. 749-753, 2002 (reprint).



86. J. C. Whitham, D. Maestripieri

Primate rituals: The function of greetings between male Guinea baboons.



Ethology, 109: 847-859, 2003.

87. D. Maestripieri

Similarities in affiliation and aggression between cross-fostered rhesus macaque females and their biological mothers.



Developmental Psychobiology, 43: 1-7, 2003.

88. J. R. Roney, S. V. Mahler, D. Maestripieri

Behavioral and hormonal responses of men to brief interactions with women.



Evolution and Human Behavior, 24: 365-375, 2003.

89. D. Maestripieri, K. Wallen

Nonhuman primate models of developmental psychopathology: problems

and prospects.

In: Neurodevelopmental Mechanisms in Psychopathology (ed. by D. Cicchetti & E. Walker). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 187-214, 2003.



90. D. Maestripieri

The past, present, and future of primate psychology.

In: Primate Psychology (ed. by D. Maestripieri). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 1-16, 2003.

91. D. Maestripieri

Attachment.

In: Primate Psychology (ed. by D. Maestripieri). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 108-143, 2003.

92. J. R. Roney, D. Maestripieri

Social development and affiliation.

In: Primate Psychology (ed. by D. Maestripieri). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 171-204, 2003.

93. L. A. Parr, D. Maestripieri

Nonvocal communication.

In: Primate Psychology (ed. by D. Maestripieri). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 324-358, 2003.

94. D. Maestripieri, S. R. Ross

Sex differences in play among western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) infants: implications for adult behavior and social structure.



American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 123: 52-61, 2004.

95. D. Maestripieri

Genetic aspects of mother-offspring conflict in rhesus macaques.



Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 55: 381-387, 2004.

96. J. R. Roney, J. C. Whitham, M. Leoni, A. Bellem, N. Wielebnowski, D. Maestripieri

Relative digit lengths and testosterone levels in Guinea baboons



Hormones and Behavior, 45: 285-290, 2004.

97. J. R. Roney, D. Maestripieri

Relative digit lengths predict men’s behavior and attractiveness during social

interactions with women.

Human Nature, 15: 271-282, 2004.

98. D. Maestripieri, J. R. Roney, N. DeBias, K. M. Durante, G. M. Spaepen

Father absence, menarche, and interest in infants among adolescent girls.



Developmental Science, 7: 560-566, 2004.

99. D. Maestripieri, K. M. Durante

Infant colic: re-evaluating the adaptive hypotheses.



Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 27: 468-469, 2004.

100. D. Maestripieri, S. R. Ross

Maternal influences on infant behavioral development in western lowland gorillas. In: Advances in Psychology Research, Vol. 27 (ed. by S. P. Shohov). Hauppage, NY: Nova Science Publishers, pp. 97-112, 2004.



101. D. Maestripieri

Maternal behavior, infant handling, and socialization.

In: Macaque Societies: A Model for the Study of Social Organization (ed. by B. Thierry, M. Singh & W. Kaumanns). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 231-234, 2004.

102. D. Maestripieri, J. R. Roney

Primate copulation calls and post-copulatory female choice.



Behavioral Ecology, 16: 106-113, 2005.

103. D. Maestripieri, S. G. Lindell, A. Ayala, P. W. Gold, J. D. Higley

Neurobiological characteristics of rhesus macaque abusive mothers and their relation to social and maternal behavior



Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 29: 51-57, 2005.

104. D. Maestripieri

On the importance of comparative research for the understanding of human behavior and development: A Reply to Gottlieb & Lickliter (2004).



Social Development, 14: 181-186, 2005.

105. D. Maestripieri, M. Leoni, S. S. Raza, E. J. Hirsch, J. C. Whitham

Female copulation calls in Guinea baboons: Evidence for post-copulatory female choice?



International Journal of Primatology, 26: 737-758, 2005.

106. D. Maestripieri

Effects of early experience on female behavioural and reproductive development in rhesus macaques.



Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 272: 1243-1248, 2005.

107. D. Maestripieri

Early experience affects the intergenerational transmission of infant abuse in rhesus monkeys.



Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A., 102: 9726-9729, 2005.

108. D. Maestripieri

Gestural communication in three species of macaques (Macaca mulatta, M. nemestrina, M. arctoides): Use of signals in relation to dominance and social context.



Gesture, 5: 57-73, 2005.

109. D. Maestripieri

Improbable antics: Notes from a gorilla guru.

In: King Kong is Back!  (ed. by D. Brin). Dallas, TX: BenBella Books, pp. 85-91, 2005.

110. G. R. Pradhan, A. Engelhardt, C. P. van Schaik, D. Maestripieri

The evolution of female copulation calls in primates: a review and a new model.



Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 59: 333-343, 2006.

111. D. Maestripieri, J. R. Roney

Evolutionary developmental psychology: Contributions from comparative

research with nonhuman primates.

Developmental Review, 26: 120-137, 2006.

112. J. R. Roney, K. N. Hanson, K. M. Durante, D. Maestripieri.

Reading men’s faces: Women’s mate attractiveness judgments track men’s

testosterone and interest in infants.

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 273: 2169-2175, 2006.

113. K. McCormack, M. M. Sanchez, M. Bardi, D. Maestripieri.

Maternal care patterns and behavioral development of rhesus macaque

abused infants in the first 6 months of life.

Developmental Psychobiology, 48: 537-550, 2006.

114. D. Maestripieri, J. D. Higley, S. G. Lindell, T. K. Newman, K. McCormack, M. M.

Sanchez.


Early maternal rejection affects the development of monoaminergic systems and

adult abusive parenting in rhesus macaques.



Behavioral Neuroscience, 120: 1017-1024, 2006.

115. D. Maestripieri, K. McCormack, S. G. Lindell, J. D. Higley, M. M. Sanchez.

Influence of parenting style on the offspring's behavior and CSF monoamine metabolite levels in crossfostered and noncrossfostered female rhesus macaques.



Behavioural Brain Research, 175: 90-95, 2006.

116. M. S. Gerald, C. Waitt, D. Maestripieri.

An experimental examination of female responses to infant face coloration in

rhesus macaques.

Behavioural Processes, 73: 253-256, 2006.

117. D. Maestripieri, J. Mayhew, C. L. Carlson, C. L. Hoffman, J. M. Radtke

One-male harems and female social dynamics in Guinea baboons.



Folia Primatologica, 78: 56-68, 2007.

118. D. Maestripieri, S. G. Lindell, J. D. Higley.

Intergenerational transmission of maternal behavior in rhesus monkeys and its

underlying mechanisms.

Developmental Psychobiology, 49: 165-171, 2007.

119. D. Maestripieri.

Social and biological influences on rhesus monkey development and health across

the lifespan: Challenges and rewards of population-based bio-behavioral research with nonhuman primates.

In: Proceedings of the 2006 Chicago Workshop on Biomarkers in Population-Based Health and Aging Research (ed. by S. Lindau & N. Gavrilova). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Center on Demography and Economics of Aging, pp. 7-24, 2007.



120. C. Waitt, D. Maestripieri, M. S. Gerald.

Effects of parity and age on female attraction to faces of infants and neonates in

rhesus macaques.

Primates, 48: 164-167, 2007.

121. D. Maestripieri

Gestural communication in three species of macaques (Macaca mulatta, M. nemestrina, M. arctoides): Use of signals in relation to dominance and social context.

In: Gestural Communication in Nonhuman and Human Primates.

Ed. by K. Liebal, C. Muller, & S. Pika. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 51-66. 2007.



122. M. M. Sanchez, O. Alagbe, J. C. Felger, J. Zhang, A. E. Graff, A. P. Grand,

D. Maestripieri, A. H. Miller.

Activated p38 MAPK is associated with decreased CSF 5-HIAA and increased maternal rejection during infancy in rhesus monkeys.

Molecular Psychiatry, 12: 895-897, 2007.

123. J. C. Whitham, M. S. Gerald, D. Maestripieri.

Intended receivers and functional significance of grunt and girney vocalizations in free-ranging female rhesus macaques.



Ethology, 113: 862-874, 2007.

124. E. P. Riley, B. Suryobroto, D. Maestripieri.

Distribution of Macaca ochreata and identification of mixed ochreata-tonkeana groups in South Sulawesi, Indonesia.



Primate Conservation, 22: 1-5, 2007.

125. D. Maestripieri.

Primate behavior and misbehavior in Michael Crichton’s Congo.

In: The Science of Michael Crichton (ed. by K. R. Grazier).

Dallas, TX: BenBella Books, pp. 59-68, 2008.



126. D. Maestripieri, C. L. Hoffman, R. Fulks, M. S. Gerald.

Plasma cortisol responses to stress in lactating and nonlactating female rhesus

macaques.

Hormones and Behavior, 53: 170-176, 2008.

127. D. Maestripieri.

The role of the brain serotonergic system in the origin and transmission of

adaptive and maladaptive variations in maternal behavior in rhesus macaques.

In: Neurobiology of the Parental Brain (ed. by R. Bridges).

Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 163-173, 2008.

128. D. Maestripieri.

Biological bases of maternal attachment.

In: Current Directions in Developmental Psychology (ed. by L. S. Liben).

Boston: Pearson, pp. 37-42, 2008 (reprint).



129. D. Maestripieri.

Neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying the intergenerational transmission of

maternal behavior and infant abuse in rhesus monkeys.

In: Hormones and Social Behavior (ed. by D. Pfaff, C. Kordon, P. Chanson, & Y.

Christen).

Berlin: Springer, pp. 121-130, 2008.



130. C. S. Barr, M. L. Schwandt, S. G. Lindell, J. D. Higley, D. Maestripieri, D. Goldman,

S. J. Suomi, M. Heilig.

Variation at the mu-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) influences attachment behavior in infant primates.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A., 105: 5277-5281, 2008.

131. C. Carere, D. Maestripieri.

The behavioral repertoire approach in comparative personality research:

inconsistencies between theory and practice.

European Journal of Personality, 22: 457-459, 2008.

132. C. L. Hoffman, A. V. Ruiz-Lambides, E. Davila, E. Maldonado, M. S. Gerald,

D. Maestripieri.

Sex differences in survival costs of reproduction in a promiscuous primate.

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 62: 1711-1718, 2008.

133. D. Maestripieri.

On the use of comparative primate research for understanding human language

evolution.

Current Anthropology, 49: 1066-1067, 2008.

134. D. Maestripieri.

The contribution of comparative research to the development and testing of life-

history models of human attachment and reproductive strategies.

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 32: 37-38, 2009.

135. D. Maestripieri, C. L. Hoffman, G. M. Anderson, C. S. Carter, J. D. Higley.

Mother-infant interactions in free-ranging rhesus macaques: Relationships between physiological and behavioral variables.



Physiology & Behavior, 96: 613-619, 2009.

136. D. Maestripieri, J. M. Mateo.

The role of maternal effects in mammalian evolution and adaptation.

In: Maternal Effects in Mammals (ed. by D. Maestripieri & J. M. Mateo).

Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, pp. 1-9, 2009.



137. D. Maestripieri.

Maternal influences on offspring growth, reproduction, and behavior in primates.

In: Maternal Effects in Mammals (ed. by D. Maestripieri & J. M. Mateo).

Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, pp. 256-291, 2009.



138. J. M. Mateo, D. Maestripieri.

Maternal effects in mammals: Conclusions and future directions.

In: Maternal Effects in Mammals (ed. by D. Maestripieri & J. M. Mateo).

Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, pp. 322-334, 2009.



139. K. McCormack, T. K. Newman, J. D. Higley, D. Maestripieri, M. M. Sanchez.

Serotonin transporter gene variation, infant abuse, and responsiveness to stress in

rhesus macaque mothers and infants.

Hormones and Behavior, 55: 538-547, 2009.



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