Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Robert Sapolsky
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- SECTION ONE HISTORICAL, CROSS-CULTURAL, AND DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE PERSPECTIVES
- SECTION TWO HOW EXPERIENCE INTERACTS WITH BIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
- SECTION THREE FORMATIVE RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN AND ACROSS GENERATIONS
- 7 Ethnographic Case Study: Bofi Foragers and Farmers – Case Studies on the Determinants of Parenting Behavior and Early Childhood Experiences
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 8 Clinical Case Study: Good Expectations – A Case Study of Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy to Prevent the Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 9 Ethological Case Study: Infant Abuse in Rhesus Macaques
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 10 Clinical Case Study: Multigenerational Ataques De Nervios in a Dominican American Family – A Form of Intergenerational Transmission of Violent Trauma?
- Commentary
- Commentary
- SECTION FOUR SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS OF CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT – NORMATIVE SETTINGS, PRACTICES, AND CONSEQUENCES
- SECTION FIVE FEAR, FUN, AND THE BOUNDARIES OF SOCIAL EXPERIENCE
- SECTION SIX PUBLIC HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
- Index
- References
9 - Ethological Case Study: Infant Abuse in Rhesus Macaques
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Robert Sapolsky
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- SECTION ONE HISTORICAL, CROSS-CULTURAL, AND DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE PERSPECTIVES
- SECTION TWO HOW EXPERIENCE INTERACTS WITH BIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
- SECTION THREE FORMATIVE RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN AND ACROSS GENERATIONS
- 7 Ethnographic Case Study: Bofi Foragers and Farmers – Case Studies on the Determinants of Parenting Behavior and Early Childhood Experiences
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 8 Clinical Case Study: Good Expectations – A Case Study of Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy to Prevent the Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 9 Ethological Case Study: Infant Abuse in Rhesus Macaques
- Commentary
- Commentary
- 10 Clinical Case Study: Multigenerational Ataques De Nervios in a Dominican American Family – A Form of Intergenerational Transmission of Violent Trauma?
- Commentary
- Commentary
- SECTION FOUR SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS OF CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT – NORMATIVE SETTINGS, PRACTICES, AND CONSEQUENCES
- SECTION FIVE FEAR, FUN, AND THE BOUNDARIES OF SOCIAL EXPERIENCE
- SECTION SIX PUBLIC HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
- Index
- References
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The use of animal models figures prominently in mental health research and can play an especially important role in our efforts to understand developmental psychopathologies. The vast majority of animal research is conducted with rodents, and a typical approach involves experimentally re-creating behavioral, psychological, or neurobiological conditions that share some similarities with human psychopathologies or their biological substrates. For example, human depression can be experimentally modeled as learned helplessness in rodents, and tested in a forced swimming paradigm. In this task, a rat is placed in a water tank for a given period of time. After the rat's efforts at escaping from the tank through swimming have failed, some animals stop struggling, exhibiting behavioral passivity and neuroendocrine changes that share some similarities with those observed in people who suffer from clinical depression.
A different approach to modeling human psychopathologies involves identifying similar pathologies that occur naturally in animals. This approach is particularly powerful if conditions similar to human mental disorders are identified in animals that are closest and most similar to us, such as the anthropomorphic primates (i.e., the Old World monkeys and apes). In this chapter, we illustrate this approach by reviewing research on the natural occurrence of infant abuse in nonhuman primate populations, and by discussing how this research can help us understand the causes and developmental consequences of child maltreatment in humans (see also Maestripieri, 1999; Maestripieri & Carroll, 1998a; Sanchez, 2006).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Formative ExperiencesThe Interaction of Caregiving, Culture, and Developmental Psychobiology, pp. 224 - 237Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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