Advances in the Study of Behavior, Volume 35Peter J.B. Slater, Charles T. Snowdon, Timothy J. Roper, H. Jane Brockmann, Marc Naguib The aim of Advances in the Study of Behavior is to serve scientists engaged in the study of animal behavior, including psychologists, neuroscientists, biologists, ethologists, pharmacologists, endocrinologists, ecologists, and geneticists. Articles in the series present critical reviews of significant research programs with theoretical syntheses, reformulation of persistent problems, and/or highlighting new and exciting research concepts. Volume 35 is an eclectic volume that includes the mechanisms and evolution of arthropod and anuran communal sexual displays, a functional analysis of feeding, the sexual behavior and breeding system of tufted capuchin monkeys, acoustic communication in noise, ethics and behavioral biology, prenatal sensory ecology and experience, conflict and cooperation in chimpanzees, and the tradeoffs in the adaptive use of social and asocial learning. |
Contents
A Functional Analysis of Feeding | 63 |
The Sexual Behavior and Breeding System of Tufted Capuchin | 105 |
Reproductive Physiology and Sexual Behavior | 113 |
Reproductive Competition and Mate Choice | 127 |
A OneMale or a MultiMale Breeding System? | 139 |
Areas for Future Research | 141 |
Summary | 143 |
References | 144 |
Towards Resolution | 220 |
Making the Assessments | 224 |
Conclusion | 229 |
Summary | 230 |
References | 231 |
Implications for Perceptual and Behavioral Development in Precocial Birds ROBERT LICKLITER I Introduction | 235 |
Developmental Analysis of the Prenatal Sensory Ecology of Precocial Birds | 238 |
The Developmental Dynamics of the Prenatal Sensory Ecology of Precocial Birds | 244 |
Acoustic Communication in Noise HENRIK BRUMM AND HANS SLABBEKOORN I The Problem of Background Noise | 151 |
The Senders SideSignal Production | 154 |
The Receivers SideSignal Perception | 169 |
Conclusions | 192 |
Summary | 193 |
References | 194 |
Ethics and Behavioral Biology PATRICK BATESON I Introduction | 211 |
Origins of Animal Liberation and Animal Rights | 212 |
Other Ethical Positions | 214 |
The Ethical Case for Using Animals in Research | 218 |
The Dividends of an EcologicalDevelopmental | 262 |
Conflict and Cooperation in Wild Chimpanzees | 275 |
Cooperation | 299 |
TradeOffs in the Adaptive Use of Social and Asocial Learning | 333 |
Evidence That Animals Exploit Social Information | 346 |
Implications for Social Learning Researchers | 364 |
| 381 | |
Contents of Previous Volumes | 391 |
Common terms and phrases
acoustic communication acoustic signals adaptations aggression alpha male amplitude animals anurans assessment auditory scene analysis auditory stream auditory system avian background noise Behav birds bobwhite quail Boesch budgerigars Cambridge capuchin monkeys Carosi Cebus apella chimpanzees Comp competition conspecific cooperation copulation costs cues cycle detection developmental dominant ecology embryos environment evolution experience females foraging frequency frogs function Gombe Goodall Gottlieb grooming habitat humans increased individuals infants interactions intersensory Janson levels Lickliter Lombard effect male chimpanzees mammals masking maternal call mating meal Mitani monkeys Ngogo Nishida observed patterns perceptual personal information Physiol postnatal precocial preference prenatal development prenatal sensory primates Primatol proceptive Psychobiol Psychol rats reliable reproductive response selective attention sensory ecology sensory stimulation sensory systems sexual social information social learning song sound species species-specific spectral sperm studies subordinate males synchronous Taļ temporal threshold tion tufted capuchins vocalizations Watts wild Wrangham



