Abstract
Using a previously developed quantitative scale of social behavior, interactions between group members in seven groups of rhesus macaques were studied. Analysis of 636 behavior chains showed that the large number of different chain sequences (445) was due in part to the large number of contexts in which interactions were occurring. A catalog of 33 contexts of interaction was empirically developed. Particular behaviors were found to have different frequencies of occurrence in different contexts. These frequency differences can be accounted for by the verbal message statements derived for each behavior.

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