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Author Boissy, A.
Title Fear and Fearfulness in Animals Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1995 Publication The Quarterly Review of Biology Abbreviated Journal The Quarterly Review of Biology
Volume 70 Issue 2 Pages 165-191
Keywords
Abstract Persistence of individual differences in animal behavior in reactions to various environmental challenges could reflect basic divergences in temperament, which might be used to predict details of adaptive response. Although studies have been carried out on fear and anxiety in various species, including laboratory, domestic and wild animals, no consistent definition of fearfulness as a basic trait of temperament has emerged. After a classification of the events that may produce a state of fear, this article describes the great variability in behavior and in physiological patterns generally associated with emotional reactivity. The difficulties of proposing fearfulness-the general capacity to react to a variety of potentially threatening situations-as a valid basic internal variable are then discussed. Although there are many studies showing covariation among the psychobiological responses to different environmental challenges, other studies find no such correlations and raise doubts about the interpretation of fearfulness as a basic personality trait. After a critical assessment of methodologies used in fear and anxiety studies, it is suggested that discrepancies among results are mainly due to the modulation of emotional responses in animals, which depend on numerous genetic and epigenetic factors. It is difficult to compare results obtained by different methods from animals reared under various conditions and with different genetic origins. The concept of fearfulness as an inner trait is best supported by two kinds of investigations. First, an experimental approach combining ethology and experimental psychology produces undeniable indicators of emotional reactivity. Second, genetic lines selected for psychobiological traits prove useful in establishing between behavioral and neuroendocrine aspects of emotional reactivity. It is suggested that fearfulness could be considered a basic feature of the temperament of each individual, one that predisposes it to respond similarly to a variety of potentially alarming challenges, but is nevertheless continually modulated during development by the interaction of genetic traits of reactivity with environmental factors, particularly in the juvenile period. Such interaction may explain much of the interindividual variability observed in adaptive responses.
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Publisher The University of Chicago Press Place of Publication Editor
Language Summary Language Original Title
Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title
Series Volume Series Issue Edition
ISSN 0033-5770 ISBN Medium
Area Expedition Conference
Notes doi: 10.1086/418981 Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 6664
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Author Shmidt Mech, L.D.
Title Wolf pack size and food acquisition Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1997 Publication Am Nat Abbreviated Journal
Volume 150 Issue Pages
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Shmidt Mech1997 Serial 6482
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Author Kräußlich, H.; Brem, G.
Title Tierzucht und allgemeine Landwirtschaftslehre für Tiermediziner Type Book Whole
Year (up) 1997 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
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Publisher Enke Place of Publication Stuttgart Editor
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 6542
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Author Breitenmoser, U.
Title Large predators in the Alps: the fall and rise of man's competitors Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1998 Publication Biol Conserv Abbreviated Journal
Volume 83 Issue Pages
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Breitenmoser1998 Serial 6450
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Author Gese, E.M.; Ruff, R.L.
Title Howling by coyotes (Canis latrans): variation among social classes, seasons, and pack sizes Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1998 Publication Can J Zool Abbreviated Journal
Volume 76 Issue Pages
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Gese1998 Serial 6462
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Author Peters, G.; Tembrock, G.
Title Subharmonics, biphonation, and deterministic chaos in mammal vocalizations Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1998 Publication Bioacoustics Abbreviated Journal
Volume 9 Issue Pages
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Peters1998 Serial 6483
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Author
Title Animal Acoustic Communication: Sound Analysis and Research Methods Type Book Whole
Year (up) 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
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Publisher Springer Place of Publication Berlin Editor
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ ref56 Serial 6497
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Author Nissen, J.
Title Enzyklopädie der Pferderassen Type Book Whole
Year (up) 1998 Publication Abbreviated Journal
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Publisher Kosmos Place of Publication Stuttgart Editor
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 6543
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Author Mladenoff, D.J.; Sickley, T.A.; Wydeven, A.P.
Title Predicting gray wolf landscape recolonization: logistic regression models vs. new field data Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1999 Publication Ecol Appl Abbreviated Journal
Volume 9 Issue Pages
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Notes Approved no
Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Mladenoff1999 Serial 6442
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Author Custance, D.; Whiten, A.; Fredman, T.
Title Social learning of an artificial fruit task in capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella). Type Journal Article
Year (up) 1999 Publication Journal of Comparative Psychology Abbreviated Journal J. Comp. Psychol.
Volume 113 Issue 1 Pages 13-23
Keywords
Abstract Social learning in 11 human-raised capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) was investigated using an artificial fruit that was designed as an analogue of natural foraging problems faced by primates. Each subject observed a human model open each of 3 principal components on the fruit in 1 of 2 alternative ways (“morphs”). The capuchin monkeys reproduced, to differing extents, the alternative techniques used for opening 1 component of the task (poking vs. pulling while twisting out a pair of smooth plastic bolts) but not the other 2. From the subjects' actions on the bolt latch, independent coders could recognize which morph they had witnessed, and they observed a degree of matching to the demonstrator's act consistent with simple imitation or object movement reenactment (A learns from watching B how an object, or parts of an object, move). Thus, these capuchins were capable of more complex social learning than has been recently ascribed to monkeys. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 6563
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