Publications of Margaret Chatham Crofoot
All genres
Journal Article (73)
51.
Journal Article
6, 27704 (2016)
Both nearest neighbours and long-term affiliates predict individual locations during collective movement in wild baboons. Scientific Reports 52.
Journal Article
31 (8), pp. 1849 - 1862 (2016)
Movement patterns of three arboreal primates in a Neotropical moist forest explained by LiDAR-estimated canopy structure. Landscape Ecology 53.
Journal Article
12, pp. 90 - 96 (2016)
The feedback between where we go and what we know - information shapes movement, but movement also impacts information acquisition. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 54.
Journal Article
348 (6240), p. aaa2478 - aaa2478 (2015)
Terrestrial animal tracking as an eye on life and planet. Science 55.
Journal Article
348 (6241), pp. 1358 - 1361 (2015)
Shared decision-making drives collective movement in wild baboons. Science 56.
Journal Article
349 (6251), pp. 935 - 936 (2015)
The wisdom of baboon decisions: Response. Science 57.
Journal Article
4 (2014)
Social networks in primates: smart and tolerant species have more efficient networks. Scientific Reports 58.
Journal Article
34 (6), pp. 1281 - 1297 (2013)
Spatiotemporal interactions among three neighboring groups of free-ranging white-footed tamarins (Saguinus leucopus) in Colombia. International Journal of Primatology 59.
Journal Article
152 (1), pp. 79 - 85 (2013)
The cost of defeat: Capuchin groups travel further, faster and later after losing conflicts with neighbors. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 60.
Journal Article
9 (70), pp. 842 - 847 (2012)
Non-random walks in monkeys and humans. Interface: Journal of the Royal Society 61.
Journal Article
83 (3-6), pp. 252 - 273 (2012)
Why mob? Reassessing the costs and benefits of primate predator harassment. Folia primatologica 62.
Journal Article
109 (2), pp. 501 - 505 (2012)
Cheating monkeys undermine group strength in enemy territory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 63.
Journal Article
33 (2), pp. 440 - 446 (2012)
Risky business? Lethal attack by a jaguar sheds light on the costs of predator mobbing for Capuchins (Cebus capucinus). International Journal of Primatology 64.
Journal Article
73 (8), pp. 821 - 833 (2011)
Aggression, grooming and group-level cooperation in white-faced capuchins (Cebus capucinus): Insights from social networks. American Journal of Primatology 65.
Journal Article
54 (12), pp. 1931 - 1948 (2011)
Tracking animal location and activity with an automated radio telemetry system in a tropical rainforest. Computer Journal 66.
Journal Article
5 (11), e15002 (2010)
Modeling the spatial distribution and fruiting pattern of a key tree species in a neotropical forest: Methodology and potential applications. PLoS One 67.
Journal Article
80 (3), pp. 475 - 480 (2010)
Does watching a monkey change its behaviour? Quantifying observer effects in habituated wild primates using automated radiotelemetry. Animal Behaviour 68.
Journal Article
6 (12), pp. 929 - 930 (2010)
Monkey and cell-phone-user mobilities scale similarly. Nature Physics 69.
Journal Article
30 (1), pp. 125 - 141 (2009)
Field anesthesia and health assessment of free-ranging Cebus capucinus in Panama. International Journal of Primatology 70.
Journal Article
105 (2), pp. 577 - 581 (2008)
Interaction location outweighs the competitive advantage of numerical superiority in Cebus capucinus intergroup contests. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 71.
Journal Article
144, pp. 1473 - 1495 (2007)
Mating and feeding competition in white-faced capuchins (Cebus capucinus): the importance of short- and long-term strategies. Behaviour 72.
Journal Article
144, pp. 1599 - 1619 (2007)
Use of overlap zones among group-living primates: a test of the risk hypothesis. Behaviour 73.
Journal Article
22 (2), pp. 135 - 145 (2003)
Reproductive assessment of the great hornbill (Buceros bicornis) by fecal hormone analysis. Zoo Biology Book Chapter (3)
74.
Book Chapter
“Next-gen” tracking in primatology: opportunities and challenges. In: Spatial Analysis in Field Primatology: Applying GIS at Varying Scales, pp. 42 - 63 (Eds. Dolins, F. L.; Shaffer, C. A.; Porter, L. M.; Hickey, J. R.; Nibbelink, N. P.). Cambridge University Press (2021)
75.
Book Chapter
Social and spatial relationships between primate groups. In: Primate ecology and conservation. A handbook of techniques, pp. 151 - 176 (Eds. Sterling, E.; Bynum, N.; Blair, M.). Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013)
76.
Book Chapter
Intergroup Aggression in Primates and Humans: The Case for a Unified Theory. In: Mind the Gap: Tracing the Origins of Human Universals (Eds. Kappeler, P. M.; Silk, J. B.) (2010)
Conference Paper (1)
77.
Conference Paper
Mining following relationships in movement data. In: 2013 IEEE 13th International Conference on Data Mining, pp. 458 - 467. IEEE 13th International Conference on Data Mining, Dallas, Texas, December 07, 2013 - December 10, 2013. IEEE (2013)