Abstract

Twenty-one monkeys continuously fed one of five diets high in tyrosine, histidine, alanine, glycine, or tryptophan between the ages of 1 and 12 months were compared with 20 controls. Social behavior either (a) while on the diet and tested in familiar groups of four or (b) while on a normal diet and paired with unfamiliar monkeys showed no effects of the high amino acid diets, confirming a previous analysis of learning ability.

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