Goals of Neuroethology

There is no sharp line separating neuroethology from psychobiology, behavioral neurobiology, and similar terms in common use. Species-characteristic behavior is not necessarily purely innate and does not exclude learned behavior or the process of learning, even when the task acquired is artificial o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioscience 1990-04, Vol.40 (4), p.244-248
1. Verfasser: Bullock, Theodore Holmes
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container_title Bioscience
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creator Bullock, Theodore Holmes
description There is no sharp line separating neuroethology from psychobiology, behavioral neurobiology, and similar terms in common use. Species-characteristic behavior is not necessarily purely innate and does not exclude learned behavior or the process of learning, even when the task acquired is artificial or maladaptive. The term neuroethology is used when there is emphasis on or relevance to the understanding of natural behavior.
doi_str_mv 10.2307/1311260
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source Oxford University Press Journals Digital Archive legacy; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Analysis
Animals
Behavioral neuroscience
Bird songs
Brain
Evolution
Evolutionary biology
Insect behavior
Neurology
Neurons
Physiology
Psychobiology
Psychophysiology
Taxa
title Goals of Neuroethology
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