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Funded by a grant from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) (5P40RR003640),
National Institutes of Health



Bibliography 2001

2001

  1. Ansorge, H. Assessing non-metric skeleton characters as a morphological tool. Zoology 104(Special Issue):268-277, (2001)

  2. Bercovitch, F. B. Reproductive ecology of Old World monkeys, pp. 369-396 in Reproductive Ecology and Human Evolution (Ed. by P. Ellison), New York: Aldine/de Gruyter. (2001)

  3. Buch, S., Pinson, D., King, C., Raghavan, R., Hou, Y., Li, Z., Adany, I., Hicks, A., Villinger, F., Kumar, A., and Narayan, O. Inhibitory and enhancing effects of IFN-G and IL-4 on SHIVKU infection in rhesus macaque macrophage: Correlation between Th2 cytokines and productive infection in tissue macrophages during late stage infection. Cytokine 13: 295-304. (2001)

  4. DeVinney, B.J., Berman, C.M., and Rasmussen, K.L.R. Changes in yearling rhesus monkey's relationships with their mothers after sibling birth. American Journal of Primatology 54(4): 193-210. (2001)

  5. Gerald, M.S., Rasmussen, K.L., Suomi, S.J., and Higley, D. A characterization of eye color variability in captive and free-ranging rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). American Journal of Primatology 54(1): 42, (Abstrcat). (2001)

  6. Gerald, MS. Sexual selection and sexual dichromatism in primates. Primate Report. (Sp iss 60-1). Pgs: 22, (Abstrcat). (2001)

  7. Hauser, M.D. What do animals think about numbers? Exploring Animal Behavior: Readings from American Scientist. 3rd Ed. Sherman P.W., Alcock J., Editors. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Assoc. Pgs: 76-83, (2001)

  8. Hauser, MD, and Akre, K. Asymmetries in the timing of facial and vocal expressions by rhesus monkeys: Implications for hemispheric specialization. Animal Behaviour, 61(2): 391-400. (2001)

  9. Hauser, M.D. Searching for food in the wild: A nonhuman primate's expectations about invisible displacement. Developmental Science 4 (1): 84-93. (2001)

  10. Kumar, A., Buch, S., Lifson, J., Foresman, L., Bischofberge N., and Narayan, O. Development of Virus Specific Immune Responses in SHIVKU infected Macaques Treated with PMPA. Virology. 279:97-108. (2001)

  11. Kumar, A., Li, Z., Lifson, J., Jia, F., Mukherjee, S., Adany, I., Liu, Z., Piatak, M., Sheffer, D., and Narayan, O. Sequential immunization of macaques with two differentially attenuated vaccines induced long term virus-specific immune responses and conferred protection against AIDS caused by heterologous simian human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV89.6P). Virology. 279:241-256. (2001)

  12. Kumar, A., and Narayan, O. Immunization for long-term protection against AIDS using the macaque model. Review. Virology 285: 1-5. (2001)

  13. Munakata, Y., Santos, L.R., Spelke, E.S., Hauser, M.D., and O'Reilly, R.C. Visual representation in the wild: How rhesus monkeys parse objects. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 13(1): 44-58. (2001)

  14. Preston, A.M., Bercovitch, F.B., Rodriguez, C.A., Lebrón, M.R., and Rivera, C.E. Plasma ascorbic acid concentrations in a population of rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal Science 40(3): 30-32. (2001)

  15. Richmond, BG, Begun, DR, and Strait, D.S. Origin of human bipedalism: The knuckle-walking hypothesis revisited, Am J Phys Anthropol. Suppl 33:70-105. (2001)

  16. Richmond, B. G. and Strait, D.S.. Evidence that humans evolved from a knuckle-walking ancestor. Nature 410:325-6, (2001)

  17. Santos, L.R., Hauser, M.D., and Spelke, E.S. Recognition and categorization of biologically significant objects by rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta): The domain of food. Cognition 82(2):127-155. (2001)

  18. Sauermann, U., Nuernberg, P., Bercovitch, F.B., Berard, J.D., Trefilov, A., Widdig, A., Kessler, M., Schmidtke, J., and Krawckaz, M. Increased reproductive success of MHC class II heterozygous males among free-ranging rhesus macaques. Human Genetics 108 (3): 249-254. (2001)

  19. Sulkokowski, M, and Hauser, MD. Can rhesus monkeys spontaneously substract. Cognition 79 (1): 239-262. (2001)

  20. Warfield, J. Self-scratching in free-ranging infant rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca mulatta). American Jounal of Primatology 54(1): 91, (Abstract). (2001)

  21. Warfield, J. Why does male infant rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca mulatta) self-scratch more within arm's length of their mothers than at other distances from her? American Journal of Primatology 54(1): 91. (2001)

  22. Wells, J.P., and Turnquist, J.E. Ontogeny of locomotion in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta): II. Postural and locomotor behavior and habitat use in a free-ranging colony. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 115: 80-94. (2001)

  23. Widdig, A., Nuernberg, P., Krawczak, M., Streich, W.J., and Bercovitch, F.B. Paternal relatedness and age proximity regulate social relationships among adult female rhesus macaques. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98(24): 13769-13773, (2001)

  24. Zhuge, W., Jia, F., Mackay, G., Kumar, A., and Narayan, O. Antibodies that neutralize SIVmac251 in T lymphocytes cause only transient interruption of the viral life cycle in macrophages by preventing nuclear import of viral DNA. Virology 287: 436-445. (2001)

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