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The use of probing tools by tufted capuchins (cebus apella): evidence for increased right-hand preference with age
Authors:Gregory Charles Westergaard  Stephen J Suomi
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Poolesville, Maryland;(2) Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, National Institutes of Health Animal Center, P. O. Box 529, 20837 Poolesville, Maryland
Abstract:We examined hand preference in the use of tools by tufted capuchins (Cebus apella). We presented a colony of monkeys with an enclosed container designed to accommodate the use of probing tools. Over an 8-month period, 13 monkeys used probes to extract sweet syrup from the narrow opening of the apparatus. Five monkeys exhibited bias toward use of their right hand and eight monkeys exhibited bias toward use of their left hand. Adult monkeys exhibited a greater percentage of right-hand preferent probing sequences than did juveniles. These results are consistent with hypotheses that in tasks that involve the use of tools, nonhuman primates exhibit strong lateral asymmetries at the individual level, a moderate left-hand bias at the population level, and increased bias with age toward use of the right hand.
Keywords:Cebus apella            hand preference  laterality  tool use
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