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Introduction to behavior

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In a limited number of species (lab rats, mice, pigeons, monkeys, etc. ... Usually in captivity (artificial, experimental environments of a variety of types) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to behavior


1
Introduction to behavior
  • A demonstration

2
stimulus response cartoon here
3
(No Transcript)
4
Introduction to behavior
  • What is behavior?
  • A rapid and appropriate response to an
    environmental stimulus

5
Introduction to behavior
  • What is behavior?
  • A rapid and appropriate response to an
    environmental stimulus
  • How do they do this?

6
Introduction to behavior
  • What is behavior?
  • A rapid and appropriate response to an
    environmental stimulus
  • Why do they do this?

7
Introduction to behavior
  • What is behavior?
  • A rapid and appropriate response to an
    environmental stimulus
  • Why do they do this?
  • What would be an inappropriate response?

8
Introduction to behavior
  • How does behavior become adaptive?

9
Introduction to behavior
  • What are the important elements of the
    environment that select for behavioral
    characteristics?

10
Introduction to behavior
  • What are the important elements of the
    environment that select for behavioral
    characteristics?
  • Abiotic

11
Introduction to behavior
  • What are the important elements of the
    environment that select for behavioral
    characteristics?
  • Abiotic
  • Biotic

12
Introduction to behavior
  • What are the important elements of the
    environment that select for behavioral
    characteristics?
  • Abiotic
  • Biotic
  • Social!!!

13
Introduction to behavior
  • Some historical context

14
Introduction to behavior
  • Some historical context
  • The comparative psychologists

15
Introduction to behavior
  • Some historical context
  • The comparative psychologists
  • Studied a limited range of behaviors (maze
    learning, task learning, appetitive behavior,
    avoidance behavior, etc.)

16
Introduction to behavior
  • Some historical context
  • The comparative psychologists
  • Studied a limited range of behaviors
  • In a limited number of species (lab rats, mice,
    pigeons, monkeys, etc.)

17
Introduction to behavior
the Skinner Box
18
Introduction to behavior
  • Some historical context
  • The comparative psychologists
  • Studied a limited range of behaviors
  • In a limited number of species
  • Usually in captivity (artificial, experimental
    environments of a variety of types)

19
Introduction to behavior
  • Some more historical context
  • The ethologists (primarily European, in the
    1940s and 1950s)

20
Introduction to behavior
  • Some more historical context
  • The ethologists
  • Emphasized studies of wild animals under natural
    conditions (honeybees, ducks, geese, wolves,
    gulls, wasps)

21
Introduction to behavior
  • Some more historical context
  • The ethologists
  • Emphasized studies of wild animals under natural
    conditions
  • Studied a broad range of behavioral phenomena
    (communication, aggression, territoriality,
    learning, navigation, migration)

22
Introduction to behavior
  • Some more historical context
  • In 1973, the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
    Medicine went to three European ethologists

23
Introduction to behavior
  • Karl von Frisch

24
Introduction to behavior
  • Von Frisch studied communication in honeybees

25
Introduction to behavior
  • The waggle dance of a foraging worker tells her
    sisters about the food source

26
Introduction to behavior
  • Konrad Lorenz

27
Introduction to behavior
  • Lorenz studied aggression in canids (dogs, wolves)

28
Introduction to behavior
  • Lorenz studied aggression in canids (dogs)
  • and learning in birds

29
Introduction to behavior
  • Lorenz studied aggression in canids (dogs)
  • and learning in birds
  • Imprinting irreversible learning that occurs
    early in ontogeny during a brief critical period

30
Introduction to behavior
  • Fixed Action Patterns
  • stereotyped behaviors
  • innate
  • fixed because they are always done completely
    once begun

31
Introduction to behavior
  • Fixed Action Patterns
  • stereotyped behaviors
  • innate
  • fixed because they are always done completely
    once begun
  • elicited by releasers

32
Introduction to behavior
  • Nikolas Tinbergen

33
Introduction to behavior
  • Niko Tinbergen had a lasting effect on the
    development of the scientific study of animal
    behavior
  • He emphasized the use of experiments

34
Introduction to behavior
  • Niko Tinbergen had a lasting effect on the
    development of the scientific study of animal
    behavior
  • He emphasized the use of experiments
  • and use of the comparative method

35
Introduction to behavior
36
Introduction to behavior
  • The comparative method takes advantage of
    divergent evolution and convergent evolution to
    assess the evolutionary effect of the environment
    on behavior and other phenotypes

37
Introduction to behavior
  • Divergent evolution -
  • phylogenetically closely related species in
    different environments
  • Convergent evolution -
  • phylogenetically distantly related species in
    similar environments

38
Introduction to behavior
  • The heritable part of heritable variation has
    caused some controversy
  • There is plenty of data to demonstrate that
    expression of most behaviors of non-human animals
    has a genetic component
  • In fruit flies
  • What about humans?

39
Introduction to behavior
40
Introduction to behavior
Effect of environment
r 1.0
MZT
MZA
Effect of genetics
DZT
DZA
r 0.5
raised together
raised apart
41
Introduction to behavior
42
Introduction to behavior
43
Introduction to behavior
  • personality trait
  • well being
  • social potency
  • achievement
  • social closeness
  • stress reaction
  • aggression
  • control
  • absorption
  • harm avoidance
  • traditionalism
  • heritability
  • 0.48
  • 0.59
  • 0.39
  • 0.40
  • 0.53
  • 0.44
  • 0.44
  • 0.50
  • 0.55
  • 0.45
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