Advances in the study of behavior Volume 47 /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
Academic Press,
[2015]
|
Colección: | Advances in the study of behavior ;
Volume 47. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover; Advances in the Study of Behavior; Advances in the Study of Behavior; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Reflections over 50Years; References; Animal Welfare and the Paradox of Animal Consciousness; 1. Introduction; 2. Animal Consciousness: The Heart of the Paradox; 2.1 Behaviorism Applies to Other People Too; 3. Human Emotions and Animals Emotions; 3.1 Physiological Indicators of Emotion; 3.2 Behavioral Components of Emotion; 3.2.1 Vacuum Behavior; 3.2.2 Rebound; 3.2.3 "Abnormal" Behavior; 3.2.4 The Animal's Point of View; 3.2.5 Cognitive Bias
- 3.2.6 Expressions of the Emotions3.3 The Third Component of Emotion: Consciousness; 4. Definitions of Animal Welfare; 5. Conclusions; References; Social Network Analysis in Behavioral Ecology; 1. Introduction; 2. A Historical Perspective on the Study of Animal Social Structure; 2.1 Early Approaches; 2.2 Searching for a Conceptual Framework; 2.3 The Development of Sociometric Approaches in Primates; 2.4 The Study of Social Structure Embraces Nonprimates; 2.5 The Advent of Modern Social Network Analysis in Nonhuman Systems; 3. Social Network Analysis and Topics in Behavioral Ecology
- 3.1 Social Learning and Culture3.1.1 Theoretical Models of Social Learning and Culture in Structured Populations; 3.1.2 Network-Based Diffusion Methods; 3.1.3 Transmission Dynamics Using Markov Chain Models; 3.2 Collective Movement and Decision-making; 3.2.1 Collective Motion in Nonnavigating Groups; 3.2.2 Collective Navigation; 3.2.3 Initiation of Group Movement and Group Decision-making; 3.3 Animal Personalities; 3.4 Cooperation; 4. Future Directions for Social Network Analysis in Behavioral Ecology; 4.1 Comparative Approaches; 4.2 Dynamic Networks; 5. Conclusion; Acknowledgments
- FEAR, Spontaneity, and Artifact in Economic Escape Theory: A Review and Prospectus1. Introduction; 2. A Brief History of Economic Escape Theory; 3. Current Challenges to Economic Escape Theory; 4. Putative Biological Cause of the FID-AD Relationship: Costs Associated with Monitoring an Approaching Predator; 5. Is the Positive Relationship between FID and Its Constraining Variables Only a Mathematical Artifact?; 5.1 Constraint on FID Values by Alert and Starting Distances; 5.2 Methodological Issues