Expanding the scope for social information use

Our understanding of how, why, and the circumstances under which animals use social information has been facilitated by three principal areas of research, social learning, public information use and social eavesdropping. With few exceptions, these related concepts have remained remarkably distinct w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal behaviour 2007-08, Vol.74 (2), p.171-181
Hauptverfasser: Bonnie, Kristin E., Earley, Ryan L.
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container_title Animal behaviour
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creator Bonnie, Kristin E.
Earley, Ryan L.
description Our understanding of how, why, and the circumstances under which animals use social information has been facilitated by three principal areas of research, social learning, public information use and social eavesdropping. With few exceptions, these related concepts have remained remarkably distinct within the literature, with little discussion or integration among them. Are these distinctions warranted? We tackle the issue by exploring similarities and differences between the concepts with respect to how animals gather and use social information, the type of information gathered, how information is packaged, and the relative payoffs to individuals involved. We contend that none of the currently dominant paradigms, social learning, public information use, or social eavesdropping, provide a unifying theme for studying social information use. Instead, we favour the central characteristic of the three concepts, social information use, as the overarching umbrella, and advocate a broader conceptual framework for understanding more comprehensively how animals behave with their social environments. Our intention is not to revolutionize the fields of social learning, public information use or social eavesdropping, but rather to stimulate discussion among researchers investigating the abilities of animals to extract information from the social environment.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.anbehav.2006.12.009
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Animal behavior
Animal cognition
Animal ethology
behavioural cue
Biological and medical sciences
eavesdropping
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Information
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
public information
signalling
social information
Social integration
social learning
title Expanding the scope for social information use
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