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Author |
Byrne, Richard; Whiten, Andrew |
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Title |
The machiavellian intelligence hypothesis:Editorial |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
1988 |
Publication |
Machiavellian Intelligence |
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1-9 |
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Publisher |
Oxford Univ Press |
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Oxford |
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ISBN |
0-19-852175-8 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4430 |
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Author |
Trillmich, F.; Rehling, A. |
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Title |
Animal Communication: Parent-Offspring |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
2006 |
Publication |
Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics |
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Pages |
284-288 |
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Keywords |
Begging Strategies; Communication; Competition; Feeding Strategies; Fitness; Parental Care; Parent-Offspring Conflict; Recognition; Sibling Conflict |
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Abstract |
Parent-offspring communication has evolved under strong selection to guarantee that the valuable resource of parental care is expended efficiently on raising offspring. To ensure allocation of parental care to their own offspring, individual recognition becomes established in higher vertebrates when the young become mobile at a time when a nest site can no longer provide a safe cue to recognition. Such recognition needs to be established by rapid, sometimes imprinting-like, processes in animals producing precocial offspring. In parents, offering strategies that stimulate feeding and entice offspring to approach the right site have evolved. Such parental signals can be olfactory, acoustic, or visual. In offspring, begging strategies involve shuffling for the best place to obtain food – be this the most productive teat or the best position in the nest. This involves signals that make the offspring particularly obvious to the parent. Parents often feed young according to their signaling intensity but may also show favoritism for weaker offspring. Offspring signals also serve to communicate the continuing presence of the young and may thereby maintain brood-care behavior in parents. Internal processes in parents may end parental care irrespective of further signaling by offspring, thus ensuring that offspring cannot manipulate parents into providing substantially more care than is optimal for their own fitness. |
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Elsevier |
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Oxford |
Editor |
Keith Brown |
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9780080448541 |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4642 |
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Author |
Shettleworth, S.J. |
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Title |
Cognition, Evolution and Behaviour |
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Book Whole |
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Year |
1998 |
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Description
How do animals perceive the world, learn, remember, search for food or mates, and find their way around? Do any non-human animals count, imitate one another, use a language, or think as we do? What use is cognition in nature and how might it have evolved? Historically, research on such questions has been fragmented between psychology, where the emphasis has been on theoretical models and lab experiments, and biology, where studies focus on evolution and the adaptive use of perception, learning, and decision-making in the field.
Cognition, Evolution and the Study of Behavior integrates research from psychology, behavioral ecology, and ethology in a wide-ranging synthesis of theory and research about animal cognition in the broadest sense, from species-specific adaptations in fish to cognitive mapping in rats and honeybees to theories of mind for chimpanzees. As a major contribution to the emerging discipline of comparative cognition, the book is an invaluable resource for all students and researchers in psychology, zoology, behavioral neuroscience. It will also interest general readers curious about the details of how and why animals--including humans--process, retain, and use information as they do.
Reviews
“This book is a very comprehensive review of animal cognition. It differs from other texts on this topic in a number of ways, as outlined by Shettleworth in her preface and in the opening chapter. Essentially, Shettleworth wants to advocate an 'adaptationist or ecological approach to cognition'. In doing so, she brings together a wealth of data on animal cognition, studied from quite different theoretical viewpoints, such as cognitive ethology, animal learning theory, neuroscience, behavioural ecology and cognitive psychology. . . . Each chapter ends with a clear and useful summary, and helpful suggestions for further reading. The book's numerous illustrations, which are mostly tables or figures redrawn by Margaret Nelson, greatly add to its appeal. . . . [T]his is a marvellously rich, well-written and stimulating book. . . . I greatly enjoyed reading [and] recommend it highly to anyone interested in animal cognition, evolution and behaviour.”--Animal Behaviour
“Sara Shettleworth has probably written the most comprehensive study of the animal mind ever and therefore a fundamental textbook on 'comparative cognition'. She first gets consciousness out of the way: whether an animal is conscious or not is impossible to determine, since consciousness is a private, subjective phenomenon. We can study cognition, and certainly cognition lends credibility to the idea that at least some animals must be at least to some degree conscious, but experiments can only prove facts about cognition. She reviews the field of cognitive ethology from the beginning and then analyzes the main cognitive tasks from an information-processing perspective By the end of her review of cognitive faculties, it become apparent that, at least among vertebrates, there are no significant differences in learning, except for language. All vertebrates are capable of 'associative' learning What no other vertebrate seems to be capable of is 'syntax'.” -- Piero Scaruffi, Thymos.com |
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Oxford University Press |
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Oxford |
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ISBN |
9780195110487 |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4712 |
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Author |
Hauser M.D |
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Title |
Invention and social transmission: new data from wild vervet monkeys |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
1988 |
Publication |
Machiavellian Intelligence |
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Pages |
327-343 |
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Oxford Univ Press |
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Oxford |
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ISBN |
0-19-852175-8 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ Byrne1988 |
Serial |
4794 |
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Author |
Cheney, D.L.; Seyfarth, R.M |
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Title |
Social and non.social knowledge in vervet monkeys |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
1988 |
Publication |
Machiavellian Intelligence |
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Pages |
255-270 |
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Oxford Univ Press |
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Oxford |
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0-19-852175-8 |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ Byrne+Whiten1988 |
Serial |
4787 |
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Author |
Davidson, D., |
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Title |
Rational Animals |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
1982 |
Publication |
reprinted in Davidson (2001); Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective |
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95-105 |
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Oxford University Press |
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Oxford |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4791 |
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Author |
Dasser V. |
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Title |
Mapping social concepts in monkeys |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
1988 |
Publication |
Machiavellian Intelligence |
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Volume |
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Pages |
85-93 |
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Oxford Univ Press |
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Oxford |
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0-19-852175-8 |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ Byrne1988 |
Serial |
4792 |
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Author |
de Waal, F. B. M. |
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Title |
Coalitions as part of reciprocal relations in the Arnhem chimpanzee colony |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
1992 |
Publication |
Coalitions and Alliances in Humans and Other Animals |
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Pages |
233-257 |
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Oxford University Press |
Place of Publication |
Oxford |
Editor |
Harcourt, A.H.; de Waal, F.B.M. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4877 |
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Author |
Ehardt, C.L.; Bernstein, I.S. |
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Title |
Conflict intervention behaviour by adult male macaques: structural and functional aspects |
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Year |
1992 |
Publication |
Coalitions and Alliances in Humans and Other Animals |
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83-111 |
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Publisher |
Oxford University Press |
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Oxford |
Editor |
Harcourt, A.H.; de Waal, F.B.M. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4926 |
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Author |
Zabel, C. J.; Glickman, S. E.; Frank, L. G.; Woodmansee, K. B.; Keppel, G. |
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Title |
Coalition formation in a colony of prepubertal spotted hyaenas |
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Year |
1992 |
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Coalitions and Alliances in Humans and Other Animals |
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113–135 |
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Oxford University Press |
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Oxford |
Editor |
Harcourt, A.H.; de Waal, F.B.M. |
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Call Number |
Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
5232 |
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