Orientation to social and nonsocial stimuli in neonatal chimpanzees and humans☆
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Earlier versions of this article were presented at the XIIth Congress of the International Primatological Society, Brasilia, Brazil, July 1988, and at the Society for Research in Child Development, Kansas City, MO, April 1989. Funding was provided by NIH Grant RR-00165 to the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center of Emory University, NIH Grant RR-03591 to R.B. Swenson of the Yerkes Center, NICHD Intramural Research Programs funds through the Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, NIH Grant HD-21013 to B.M. Lester, and a NICHD-NRSA Research Fellowship HD-07105 to K.A. Bard. The Yerkes Center is fully accredited by the American Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care. We are grateful to the assistance provided by the following people: Mary Schneider; the staff of the Great Ape Nursery of the Yerkes Center, especially Mike Ringer, Callie Wilson, and Jeanne des Islets; the Veterinary Staff of the Yerkes Center, Jack Orkin, Elizabeth Strobert, and especially Brent Swenson; and numerous students and research assistants, especially, Kathy Gardner, Laura Place, Lisa Jones, Howard Coffman, Josh Schneider, and Carolyn Fort.