Abstract

Displacement activities are behaviour patterns (mostly body care activities) characterized by their apparent irrelevance to the situation in which they appear. Scratching, autogrooming, yawning and body shaking are among the most commonly reported displacement activities in non-human primates. A review of the primate literature indicates that displacement activities tend to occur in situations of psychosocial stress and that their frequency of occurrence is affected by anxiogenic and anxiolytic drugs. In the light of this evidence, it is suggested that displacement activities can be used as indicators of emotional states arising in a variety of primate social interactions. Methodological problems associated with such a use are discussed. The hypothesis that displacement activities may also have a communicative function in non-human primates is not supported adequately by available data.

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