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CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 7

... ALONG A CENTER LINE  Two types of symmetry ...
Module 24: Operant Conditioning, Summary Notes
Module 24: Operant Conditioning, Summary Notes

... instance, if you learned that eating on the bed makes your parents mad at you, your eating behavior will change depending on what kind of response you want the situation (parents yelling or not) to have. Other important "Skinnerian" concepts that are examined in this lesson include the following: La ...
Chapter 16: Social Behavior
Chapter 16: Social Behavior

... 8. Summarize evidence on the role of physical attractiveness and similarity in attraction. 9. Summarize evidence on the role of reciprocity and romantic ideals in attraction. 10. Describe various distinctions regarding love described by Berscheid and Hatfield, and Sternberg. 11. Summarize the eviden ...
File
File

... One of the primary ways zoologists group animals has to do with the presence or absence of a coelom, and how the coelom is formed. A coelom (Greek: coel = hollow; pronounced “see-lome”) is a fluid-filled cavity between the alimentary canal and the body wall. There are 3 types of body plans related t ...
Animal Behavior : Ethology
Animal Behavior : Ethology

... experienced males more attractive to females. • Testable predictions: males learn more songs as they get older so: – The repertoire of songs is an indicator of age – Females prefer to mate with males having large repertoire of songs **actual outcome: some songbirds show their correlation while other ...
Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Animalia

... the internal organs and allows for their expansion and contraction. Acoelomate animals lack a coelom, while pseudocoelomate animals have a cavity that is not completely lined by mesodermderived tissue. ...
An Introduction to Animal Diversity
An Introduction to Animal Diversity

... •  The blastopore forms during gastrulation and connects the archenteron to the exterior of the gastrula –  In protostome development, the blastopore becomes the mouth ...
- ISpatula
- ISpatula

... Concept 3: animals can be characterized by body plans : Symmetry : animals have types of symmetry 1-no symmetry like sponges 2- Radial symmetry like sea anemones ( top and bottom sides ) 3- bilateral symmetry ( which have two axis ) front anterior to back posterior sides , top dorsal and bottom vent ...
studyguidesection3-teacher-website-ch8
studyguidesection3-teacher-website-ch8

... all previous attempts have failed refers to learned helplessness. If a person or animal perceives that they have no control over a situation or an outcome, they will then abandon all efforts in trying to change the situation. Latent Learning and Cognitive Mapping 7. Edward Tolman conducted research ...
Table of Contents - Milan Area Schools
Table of Contents - Milan Area Schools

... • Imprinting is a type of learning in which animals learn, during a critical period, a complex set of stimuli that later act as a releaser. • Lorenz showed that newly hatched goslings imprint on the image of the first object they see (normally their parent, but under experimental conditions, Lorenz ...
Animals and Simple Animals
Animals and Simple Animals

... Whales reproduce sexually. ...
what is a mammal?
what is a mammal?

...  MOST MAMMALS HAVE SPECIALIZED TEETHMAMMALS WITH TEETH HAVE TEETH THAT ARE ADAPTED TO THE TYPE OF FOOD THEY EAT ...
Chapter 17A: Invertebrate Animals
Chapter 17A: Invertebrate Animals

... Millipedes and centipedes; How can you tell them apart?_______________________ ...
Operant Conditioning Terms Teacher
Operant Conditioning Terms Teacher

... Skinner Box – a chamber containing a bar that an animal can manipulate to obtain a food or water reinforcer; devices are attached to record the animal’s rate of bar pressing ...
Early Man - Central Kitsap High School
Early Man - Central Kitsap High School

... F. Paleolithic men and women may have been roughly equal because they shared the vital responsibility of finding food. G. The word technology refers to what we make to sustain ourselves and control our environment. Stone tools were made by using a harder stone like flint to create an edge on another ...
Chapter 12: Observational Learning Lecture Outline
Chapter 12: Observational Learning Lecture Outline

... situational freedom & productivity • Studies have shown it is difficult to teach chimps to speak because they do not possess the necessary vocal apparatus ...
Mechanism for Understanding and Imitating Actions
Mechanism for Understanding and Imitating Actions

... Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning But especially, via observational learning or Imitation ...
Biological Imitation
Biological Imitation

... in autism. Further, these three capacities involve forming and coordinating social representations of self and other at increasingly complex levels via representational processes that extract patterns of similarity between self and other.” – imitation plays a primary constructive role in the generat ...
Classification and Introduction to Animals Chapter 18 & 34
Classification and Introduction to Animals Chapter 18 & 34

... •Haploid stage characterized by sperm and eggs produced by meiotic division •In most animal species, a small flagellated sperm fertilizes a larger non-motile egg, forming a zygote ...
Chapter 46
Chapter 46

... Originates with genes that direct the formation of tissues and organs of the ...
• Animal Diversity Overview • Ch 32 • Cell Specialization • Animals
• Animal Diversity Overview • Ch 32 • Cell Specialization • Animals

... The blastula undergoes gastrulation, forming a gastrula with different layers of embryonic tissues ...
Funding Lines of FoF 3
Funding Lines of FoF 3

... 2. In this way the term “cultural heritage” also points to the necessity of placing research into cultural heritage on a firm theoretical and methodological footing, particularly as regard to the systematic relationships between cultural heritage research and historical disciplines. 3. As a multi-, ...
Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Animalia

... • Organisms can have a two, three or four chambered heart, or no heart at all. ...
Introduction to Animals - St. Thomas the Apostle School
Introduction to Animals - St. Thomas the Apostle School

... • Most sponges are hermaphrodites that produce both sperm and eggs, though sponges cannot fertilize their own eggs; sponges can also reproduce asexually by budding or regeneration ...
Gray Whale Migration
Gray Whale Migration

... Migration Behaviors  Most animals must learn their migratory routes.  Older members of the group teach the younger animals:  The route traveled  Valuable strategies and/or behaviors ...
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Animal culture

Animal culture describes the current theory of cultural learning in non-human animals through socially transmitted behaviors. The question as to the existence of culture in non-human societies has been a contentious subject for decades, much due to the inexistence of a concise definition for culture. However, many leading scientists agree on culture being defined as a process, rather than an end product. This process, most agree, involves the social transmittance of a novel behavior, both among peers and between generations. This behavior is shared by a group of animals, but not necessarily between separate groups of the same species.The notion of culture in animals dates back to Aristotle and Darwin, but the association of animals' actions with the actual word ""culture"" first was brought forward with Japanese primatologists' discoveries of socially transmitted food behaviors in the 1940s.
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