InstructionRead the questions below before you conduct your observations. Focus your observation on one primate, and note down on a pad or computer all of their social behaviour during a 15 minute window. Then post the following: Prompt 1: A summary of your observations that is at least 300 words. •Note the date, time, which cam you chose and the species of your primate. • Is your primate an adult, a juvenile or an infant? The questions below will give you ideas of the kinds of behaviours to watch out for and note down. They are for your guidance only. You may observe other things not listed here. Write notes about whatever you see. Later, you can use these questions to help you describe what you observed in your post. • How much time did your primate spend ‘grooming’ other primates? (Grooming behaviour is a variety of manual contact gestures that involve touching, stroking, and fur-cleaning). • How many different individuals did your primate groom during the observation window? Did all individuals receive the same treatment? • The primate ‘play face’ involves covering the top teeth with the lip, and pulling back the lower lips to expose the bottom teeth, in a kind of smile. Did your primate ‘play fight’ with others? Did your primate make a ‘play-face’? What did it look like to you? • When primates are afraid, their lips pull back, exposing their top and bottom teeth. Did your primate make a ‘fear face’? What was it responding to? The ‘fear face’ results in calls that sound a bit like ‘ee’ ‘ee’! Did it also call out? What did it sound like to you? • When primates want to show dominance, they sometimes push their lips forward to make a sound a bit like “oo” “oo”. Did your primate make a dominance call? What did it sound like to you? • Did your primate bear their canines with mouth open as a sign of aggression, or show the ‘smile face’ as a form of submission? • Did your primate attack another? Or get attacked? What features of the social interaction could you observe? • Did your primate make eye contact with others? Was there staring? Or did one look away? • Did your primate make panting or laughing-type noises while interacting with others? • Did your primate make a kind of solo vocalization? Describe the vocalization. What do you think the social function was? • Did your primate make vocalizations with others? Describe the vocalization. What do you think the social function of the vocalization was? • Did your primate ‘steal’ food that was in the grip of another primate? Could they have been child and parent? • Note the end time