front 1 Behavior | back 1 The nervous system's response to a stimulus and carried out by the muscular or hormonal system. They can be subject to natural selection. |
front 2 Behavioral Ecology | back 2 The study of the ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior. |
front 3 Proximate Causation | back 3 Addresses how a behavior occurs or is modified, such as Tinbergen's questions 1 and 2. |
front 4 Ultimate Causation | back 4 Addresses why a behavior occurs in the content of natural selection, including Tinbergen's questions 3 and 4 |
front 5 Fixed Action Pattern (Innate) | back 5 Sequence of unlearned, innate behaviors that is unchangeable.
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front 6 Innate behavior | back 6 developmentally fixed and does not vary amonf individuals |
front 7 Learning | back 7 The modification of behavior based on specific experiences |
front 8 Imprinting (innate) | back 8 A behavior that includes learning and innate components and is generally irreversible.
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front 9 Habituation (learned) | back 9 The ability to learn to ignore irrelevant stimuli that don't provide appropriate feedback
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front 10 Associative learning | back 10 When animals associate one feature of their environment with another |
front 11 Classical conditioning | back 11 A type of associative learning in which an arbitrary stimulus is associated with a reward or punishment
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front 12 Operant Conditioning | back 12 A type of associative learning which an animals learns to associate one of its behaviors with a reward or punishment.
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front 13 Spaital Learning | back 13 A complex modification of behavior based on experience with the spatial structure of the environment
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front 14 Cognition | back 14 The process of knowing that may include awareness, reasoning, recollection, and judgment
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front 15 Maturation | back 15 Some behaviors that improve over time attributed to learning or maturation
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front 16 Social Learning | back 16 Learning through the observation of others and forms the roots of culture
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front 17 Behavioral Rhythms | back 17 When some animal's behavior is affected by the animal's circadian rhythm, daily cycle of rest and activity
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front 18 Migration | back 18 Environmental cues can trigger movement in a particular direction
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front 19 Animal Signals and Communication | back 19 A signal is a behavior that causes a change in another animal's behavior
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front 20 Fruit Fly Courtship | back 20 A male identifies a female of the same species and orients toward her
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front 21 Waggle dance | back 21 Honeybees show complex communication with symbolic language
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front 22 Phermones | back 22 Odors that emit chemical substances
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front 23 Nocturnal animals and diurnal aniamls | back 23 Most terrestrial mammals depend on olfactory and auditory communication, while diurnal animals use visual and auditory. |
front 24 Foraging Behavior | back 24 Natural selection refines behaviors that enhance the efficiency of feeding. Such as recognizing, searching for, capturing, and eating food items |
front 25 Optimal Foraging Model | back 25 Where they see the compromise between benefits of nutrition and the cost to obtain that food.
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front 26 Mating Behavior and Mate Choice | back 26 Seeking or attracting mates, competing for mates, and caring for offspring.
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front 27 Promiscuous | back 27 No strong pair-bonds or lasting relationships. |
front 28 Monogamous relationship | back 28 When one male mates with one female, usually monogamous mating systems have similar external morphologies |
front 29 Polygamous | back 29 where an individual of one sex mates with several individuals of other sex, usually sexually dimorphic
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front 30 Sexual Dimorphism | back 30 Results from sexual selection, a form of natural selection
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front 31 Mate choice by Females | back 31 Female choice is a type of intersexual comepetition
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front 32 Mate choice copying | back 32 A behavior where individuals copy the mate choice of others |
front 33 Male competition for Mates | back 33 Male competition for mates is a source of intrasexual selection that can reduce variation among males.
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front 34 Applying Game Theory | back 34 Evaluates alternative strategies where the outcome on each individual's strategy and the strategy of other individuals
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front 35 Altruism | back 35 Natural selection favors behaviors that maximizes an individual's survival and reproduction |
front 36 Inclusive fitness | back 36 the total effect an individual has on proliferating its genes by producing offspring and helping close relatives produce offspring |
front 37 Hamilton's Rule and Kin Selection | back 37 Natural Selection favors altruism when rB> C
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front 38 Reciprocal Altruism | back 38 Altruistic behavior toward unrelated individuals can be adapative if the aided individual returns the favor in the future |
front 39 Kinesis | back 39 undirected change in the speed of an animal's movement in response to
a stimulus |
front 40 Taxis | back 40 directed movement in response to a stimulus |