Search Results for: Monkeys
Skip to resultsCan’t find what you’re looking for? Visit our FAQ page.
2,695 results for: Monkeys
-
Monkeys keep track of small numbers
Monkeys show signs of knowing when the number of faces that they see matches the number of voices that they hear, leading a research team to conclude that these primates possess basic counting skills.
By Bruce Bower -
Mother Knows Worst: Abusive parenting spans generations in monkeys
Many female rhesus monkeys who were abused as infants by their mothers do the same to their own infants, raising the prospect of using these animals as a model for human child abuse.
By Bruce Bower -
Health & MedicineVaccines against Marburg and Ebola viruses advance
Two new vaccines protect against the lethal Ebola and Marburg viruses, tests in monkeys show.
By Nathan Seppa -
Reflections of Primate Minds: Mirror images strike monkeys as special
Capuchin monkeys don't react to their own mirror images as they do to strangers, perhaps reflecting an intermediate stage of being able to distinguish oneself from others.
By Bruce Bower -
Materials ScienceFine Fabric: New, fast way to make sheets of nanotubes
Scientists have come up with a way to efficiently produce thin, transparent sheets of carbon nanotubes that are several meters long.
By Sid Perkins -
NeuroscienceMonkeys control two arms in virtual reality
A new brain-computer interface has enabled movement of two virtual limbs at the same time.
-
AnthropologyEvolution’s Lost Bite: Gene change tied to ancestral brain gains
In a controversial new report, a research team proposes that an inactivating gene mutation unique to people emerged around 2.4 million years ago and, by decreasing the size of jaw muscles, set the stage for brain expansion in our direct ancestors.
By Bruce Bower -
AnthropologyGene implicated in apes’ brain growth
A gene with poorly understood functions began to accumulate favorable mutations around 8 million years ago and probably contributed to brain expansion in ancient apes.
By Bruce Bower -
Health & MedicineSARS vaccine tests well in mouse model
Scientists have developed a DNA vaccine that stops the SARS infection in mice.
By Nathan Seppa -
Get Mellow, Fellow: Male baboons cooperate after cultural prodding
Researchers say they have found a troop of wild baboons in which females somehow transmit peaceful attitudes to males who transfer into the group.
By Bruce Bower -
ChemistryConnection blocker may stop viruses
Using compounds that disrupt the interface of two viral proteins might present a novel strategy for combating viruses, a study of herpes suggests.
By Nathan Seppa -
Health & MedicineSARS Control: First nasal vaccine effective in monkeys
An experimental SARS vaccine, tested in monkeys, can be administered directly to the respiratory tract and requires only a single dose to confer immunity.
By Carrie Lock