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Featured researches published by Garrett W. Milliken.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1990

Handedness as a function of sex and age in a large population of Lemur

Jeannette P. Ward; Garrett W. Milliken; Deanna L. Dodson; Donna K. Stafford; Michelle Wallace

A population of 194 lemurs (Lemur spp.), 116 males and 78 females, from 1 to 30 years of age, was assessed for lateralized hand use in simple food reaching with a minimum of 100 reaches per animal. A hand preference was present in 80% of the population with a bias for use of the left hand that was most characteristic of male lemurs and young lemurs. The results confirm the presence of lateralization in prosimians, and we interpret the sex and age differences in relation to current theories of neural lateralization.


Archive | 1993

Patterns of Lateralized Behavior in Prosimians

Jeannette P. Ward; Garrett W. Milliken; Donna K. Stafford

In the preceding chapter, Harris has thoroughly documented the enduring interest of the human species in the question of lateral asymmetry in the behavior of nonhuman primate species. The appearance of this book with reports of a variety of nonhuman primate laterality studies originating in many parts of the world testifies to the resurgence of interest in this topic. This chapter reports the incidence and patterning of laterality phenomena in species of prosimians, a major group of nonhuman primates much less studied in all research contexts than their anthropoid counterparts. The relative neglect of these most primitive of primates, which represent the stem from which the primate order originated, has been undergoing remediation and there now exist many sources of information about this group (see for example, Charles-Dominique, 1977; Charles-Dominiqueet al., 1980; Doyle,1974; Doyle & Martin, 1979; Jolly, 1966; Martin, 1990; Martin, Doyle, & Walker, 1974; Tattersall, 1982).


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1988

Posturally related variations in the hand preferences of the ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata variegata).

Chris Forsythe; Garrett W. Milliken; Donna K. Stafford; Jeannette P. Ward

The hand preferences of 5 semi-free-ranging black-and-white ruffed lemurs were assessed by using three distinct testing procedures. Testing conditions varied in the extent to which they required animals to make a whole body postural adjustment prior to making a reach. Minimal bodily adjustment was necessary for free foraging, whereas discrete food presentations on land (DFP-land) and in a moat (DFP-moat) promoted a gross reorientation of the animals entire body. In the DFP-moat condition 4 animals exhibited exclusive use of the left hand, and only 1 of 515 reaches was made with the right hand. Similarly, all 5 animals showed a pronounced left hand preference in the DFP-land condition. The free-foraging condition revealed a hand preference for only 1 of the 5 subjects, and that preference was weak in comparison with those measured in the other two test conditions. These findings indicate that whole body postural adjustments critically influenced the expression of hand preference and should be taken into consideration in future studies of primate hand preferences.


Primates | 1990

Lateral bias in feeding and brachiation inHylobates

Donna K. Stafford; Garrett W. Milliken; Jeannette P. Ward

Lateralized hand use in gibbons was assessed for both food reaching and leading limb in brachiation. Sex and age effects were found in hand preference for food reaching. Adult females were all very strongly right hand preferent, whereas adult males had no across group consistent preference. Within the female group there was a strong correlation between age and strength of right handedness. When compared in terms of absolute strength of hand preference, females were found to be more strongly lateralized than males. Leading limb preference in brachiation was scored into vocal and non-vocal categories. Three subjects had a shift in preferred leading limb from the non-vocal brachiation condition to the vocal brachiation condition. This shift may be influenced by the arousal effects of species typical vocalization. The results of this study underline the importance of consideration of such factors as sex and age when interpreting behavioral lateralization data. The exploration of laterality in many different response measures is important to the achievement of a complete understanding of behavioral lateralization in primates.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1991

Analyses of feeding lateralization in the small-eared bushbaby (Otolemur garnettii): A comparison with the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta).

Garrett W. Milliken; Donna K. Stafford; Deanna L. Dodson; Cindy D. Pinger; Jeannette P. Ward

Feeding related lateralization was examined in a population of 23 small-eared bushbabies (Otolemur garnettii). The three measures used to determine lateralization were food reaching, holding, and manipulation. Sex and age differences were found, with adult females showing a strong right bias and adult males a left bias. Juvenile males were weakly lateralized and less consistent across measures than adult animals. The use of standard scores to assess lateralization allowed species comparisons to be made. The results of this study were compared with results from a previous study on lateralization in the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta). Species comparisons found sex differences to be a stronger factor in lateralization than species differences.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1989

Multiple measures of hand-use lateralization in the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta).

Garrett W. Milliken; Chris Forsythe; Jeanette P. Ward


Folia Primatologica | 1991

Independent Digit Control in Foraging by the Aye-Aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis)

Garrett W. Milliken; Jeannette P. Ward; Carl J. Erickson


American Journal of Primatology | 1993

Patterns of hand and mouth lateral biases in bamboo leaf shoot feeding and simple food reaching in the gentle lemur (Hapalemur griseus)

Donna K. Stafford; Garrett W. Milliken; Jeannette P. Ward


Folia Primatologica | 1994

Subject Index, Vol. 62, 1994

Ellen S. Dierenfeld; Caroline J. Ashbourne; Anna T.C. Feistner; Deborah J. Curtis; Kathrin F. Stanger; Joseph M. Macedonia; Eluned C. Price; Elwyn L. Simons; Eleanor J. Sterling; Renée M. Winn; Kenneth E. Glander; Marc Ancrenaz; Isabelle Lackman-Ancrenaz; Nick Mundy; Mina Andriamasimanana; Bryan Carroll; David M. Haring; David Winn; Anna T. C. Feistner; Carl J. Erickson; Garrett W. Milliken; Patricia Feeser


Folia Primatologica | 1991

Contents, Vol. 56, 1991

A.M. Santillán-Doherty; J.L. Diaz; R. Mondragón-Ceballos; Stephen Phillip Easley; Anthony M. Coelho; Miho Inoue; Fusako Mitsunaga; Hideyuki Ohsawa; Akiko Takenaka; Yukimaru Sugiyama; Soumah Aly Gaspard; Osamu Takenaka; Carla Cordischi; Roberto Cozzolino; Filippo Aureli; Stefano Scucchi; S. Hopf; Garrett W. Milliken; Jeannette P. Ward; Carl J. Erickson; Alfred L. Rosenberger; Walter Carl Hartwig; Ronald G. Wolff

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Anthony M. Coelho

Texas Biomedical Research Institute

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Stephen Phillip Easley

Texas Biomedical Research Institute

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