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Joseph Soltis

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  6
Citations -  461

Joseph Soltis is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Offspring & Social relation. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 441 citations.

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The signal functions of early infant crying.

TL;DR: The evidence is most consistent with the hypothesis that excessive early infant crying is a signal of vigor that evolved to reduce the risk of a reduction or withdrawal of parental care.
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Squirrel monkey chuck call: vocal response to playback chucks based on acoustic structure and affiliative relationship with the caller

TL;DR: Post‐hoc discriminant function analyses provide preliminary evidence that females are most likely to respond to unfamiliar chucks when those chucks are close in acoustic structure to familiar chucks from their own social group, and a provisional explanation for error in the squirrel monkey signal processing system.
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Urinary prolactin is correlated with mothering and allo-mothering in squirrel monkeys

TL;DR: The squirrel monkey may represent a new primate model for investigating the endocrinology of infant care-giving and changes in urinary prolactin over time reflected changes in the reproductive state of a female who was pregnant, gave birth and lactated during the study.
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Adult cortisol response to immature offspring play in captive squirrel monkeys.

TL;DR: The disruptive effect of immature offspring produces a chronic cortisol increase in captive adult squirrel monkeys, and adults characterized by receiving play attempts, rejecting playAttempts, and lacking affiliative contact with other adults showed the highest mean urinary cortisol levels.