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         Ethology:     more books (100)
  1. Early Childhood Autism: An Ethological Approach (Advances in Ethology, 10) by Elisabeth A. Tinbergen, Niko Tinbergen, 1972-06
  2. Lek behavior in the Golden-headed Manakin, Pipra erythrocephala in Trinidad (West Indies) (Advances in ethology) by Alan Lill, 1976
  3. Entropy in Ecology and Ethology by Radu Cornel Guiasu, Silviu Guiasu, 2003-06
  4. Ethology and Psychopharmacology
  5. Politics and People in Ethology: Personal Reflections on the Study of Animal Behavior by Peter H. Klopfer, 1999-02
  6. Okologie, Lebensweise und Sozialverhalten der grauen Languren in verschiedenen Biotopen Indiens ( Advances in ethology) (German Edition) by Christian Vogel, 1976
  7. Comparative Ethology of the European and North American Ants. by W. M. Wheeler, 2010-07-24
  8. Ecology and ethology of aquatic biota
  9. African ungulates: A comparative review of their ethology and behavioral ecology (Zoophysiology and ecology) by Walter Leuthold, 1977
  10. Ethology and Nonverbal Communication in Mental Health: An Interdisciplinary Biopsychosocial Exploration (International Series in Biopsychosocial Sciences) by Samuel A. Corson, 1980-05
  11. The Child Mind; A Study in Elementary Ethology by Henrietta Home, 2010-07-24
  12. Ethology: What Animals Do and Why (Science for Everyone) by Igor Akimushkin, 1988-06
  13. Introduction to ethology;: The biology of behavior by Jean-Claude Ruwet, 1973
  14. Bibliographical References In Ethology (1899) by Thomas Pearce Bailey Jr., 2010-05-23

41. ScienceDirect - Ethology And Sociobiology - List Of Issues
Similar pages ethology pageWelcome to the ethology page Consuel Ionica Currently I am of Anthropology.Major interests Human and Animal ethology. Current
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Volume 15, Issues 5-6 , Pages 245-400 (September - November 1994) Volume 15, Issue 4 , Pages 181-243 (July 1994) Volume 15, Issue 3 , Pages 113-179 (May 1994) Volume 15, Issue 2 , Pages 59-111 (March 1994) Volume 15, Issue 1 , Pages 1-58 (January 1994) Volume 14 Volume 13 Volume 12 Volume 11 ... Volume 1
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42. Karl Grammer/Urban Ethology
Human ethology, behavior and environment interactions (University of Vienna).
http://evolution.anthro.univie.ac.at/institutes/humanbiology/grammer.html

Projects
Publications Current
Teaching

Karl Grammer Tit.A.o.Prof.
Director of the Ludwig-Boltzmann-Institute for Urban Ethology
Phone: +43 1 4277 ext.: 54766
Fax: +43 1 4277 ext.: 9547
E-Mail directly:karl.grammer@univie.ac.at
Curriculum vitae
Diplom-Studium (M.S.) in Zoology with Anthropology and Physics at the University of Munich.
Research
Diplomarbeit (Masters Thesis), Title: "Helfen und Unterstuetzen in Kindergruppen" (Helping and supporting behavior in preschool children); presented to the Faculty of Biology at the University of Munich and the Research Institute for Human Ethology, Max-Planck-Society, under the direction of I.Eibl-Eibesfeldt. Dissertation (Ph.D.), Title: Wettbewerb und Kooperation: Das Eingreifen in Konflikte unter Kindergartenkindern (Competition and Cooperation: intervention in conflict among preschool children), presented to the Faculty of Biology at the University of Munich for the doctoral degree. Project Director: "Kindergarden Project" at the Research Institute for Human Ethology. Coordination and supervision of longterm data collection and data analysis, Funded by DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft).

43. Animal Behavior, Comparitive Psychology And Ethology Resources
Links to resources on animal behavior and instincts.Category Science Biology Zoology Animal Behavior......Resources on animal behavior, comparative psychology and ethology; this class ofbehavioral adaptations are known as instincts that typically evolve over many
http://www.psychology.org/links/Environment_Behavior_Relationships/Animal_Behavi

44. Archives Of ETHOLOGY@SEGATE.SUNET.SE
Archives of active internet discussion group on animal behavior.
http://segate.sunet.se/archives/ethology.html
Archives of ETHOLOGY@SEGATE.SUNET.SE
Ethology (Discussions on animal behaviour)
Back to the index page. © SUNET 1998-2002. No commercial use or solicitations allowed.

45. Excerpt From Donald R. Griffin, Animal Minds
An excerpt from Animal Minds Beyond Cognition to Consciousness by Donald R. Griffin, the creator of the field of cognitive ethology.
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/308650.html
"The creator of the controversial field of cognitive ethology, Donald R. Griffin has spent more than three decades researching animal cognition. In a completely revised and updated edition of his classic, Animal Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness, Griffin . . . discusses his own and others' research findings including those of his critics. . . . Griffin's book will enlighten, delight and even ruffle some feathers."
Publishers Weekly "This is the book anyone interested in animal intelligence has been waiting for. Destined to become a classic, it is a brilliant synthesis of our current knowledge about the mental life of other species from the scientist who has contributed more to this subject than anyone else."
Inside the Animal Mind and former host and executive editor of the PBS television series Nature "It is difficult for us to imagine effectively dealing with the external world without our ability of internal representation. Yet, it has almost universally been assumed that all other animals are optimally adapted while totally lacking any such ability. Is that assumption a fallacy, or does it encapsulate our scientific inadequacy? Donald R. Griffin is a pioneering scholar who does not cede the world of some animal's inner representation as an impossible barrier. Instead, he presents it as an exciting objective scientific frontier."
Mind of the Raven
An excerpt from
Animal Minds
Beyond Cognition to Consciousness

by Donald R. Griffin

46. Cogprints - Subject: Ethology
Subject ethology. Subject Areas (1588) Biology (278) ethology (59). Bekoff, Marc(1995) Cognitive ethology and the Explanation of Nonhuman Animal Behavior.
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/view-bio-etho.html
Cogprints Home About Browse Search ... Help
Subject: Ethology

47. About - Ethology
Discover more about ethology, the study of animal behavior, and find outwhy animals do what they do. Advertisement. ethology Guide picks.
http://animals.about.com/cs/ethology/
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Ethology
Guide picks Ethology, the study of animal behavior, gives us valuable insights into animals' minds, including our own. Learn about why animals do what they do and how certain behaviors help them survive.
Animal Behavior Bulletin

Indiana University's Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior publishes a quarterly online newsletter. Current and back issues are available at the website. The Mindless Brain
Find out about the social insects and why their behavior evolved to such complex levels. The Animal Behavior Society The Animal Behavior Society is a non-profit group of researchers interested in furthering the study of animal behavior. Find out information about membership or simply browse their website for animal behavior articles written by members of this organization. Primate Behavior and Ecology This webpage lists a number of reports and resources pertaining to a variety of primate behavior topics including: intelligence and cognition, communication, ecology, feeding, sleep, and social.

48. How To Use The ETHOLOGY Mailing List And The Netiquette For The List
ethology@segate.sunet.se mailing list. How to use the ethology mailing list and theNetiquette for the list. (Updated Mar 26, 1996) To CANCEL your subscription.
http://www.funet.fi/~saarikko/ethology.html
ETHOLOGY@segate.sunet.se mailing list
Listowners: List Editors:
How to use the ETHOLOGY mailing list and the Netiquette for the list
(Updated Mar 26, 1996)
To CANCEL your subscription
  • You may leave the Subject: empty
  • Put only one line in the message: UNSUBSCRIBE ETHOLOGY
  • If you want to cancel your subscription for a while, send e-mail to the listserver with the message "SET ETHOLOGY NOMAIL". Subscription is resumed with "SET ETHOLOGY MAIL".
    • If your account is expiring, please send the global unsubscribe message to any revised listserver address (UNSUBSCRIBE *).
    • If you are using on your e-mail system a "vacation" option, which sends automatic replies to the sender, PLEASE, set the ethology NOMAIL option on.
  • If you want to reduce the load of incoming mail in your mailbox to
    • only one message per day: SET ETHOLOGY DIGEST
    • only the titles of messages per day: SET ETHOLOGY INDEX
    To START your subscription
  • leave the Subject: -line empty
  • Put only one line in the message: SUBSCRIBE ETHOLOGY Your Name
  • Please, save the instructions, which will be sent to you automatically.
  • 49. Behaviour - Ethology
    Image Map see below ethology is the study of animal behaviour. Althoughthey have often been dubbed as simple creatures, penguins
    http://users.capu.net/~kwelch/pp/ethology/
    Ethology is the study of animal behaviour. Although they have often been dubbed as "simple" creatures, penguins can elicit and demonstrate fairly complex behavioural patterns. There are three primary components to understanding the behaviour of a particular animal: its general behaviours, its aggressive behaviours and its sexual behaviours. You can start with a behaviour primer. Ethology Primer General Behaviour Aggressive Behaviour Sexual Behaviour

    50. Japan Echological Society
    Information on and tables of contents from its Journal of ethology. In English and Japanese.
    http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/jes2/index-e.html
    Japan Ethological Society
    (FOUNDED DECEMBER 1982)
    Japan Ethological Society publishes Journal of Ethology
    in Japanese
    Subscription and Membership information
    Officers and Council for 2001-2002
    President:
    Tetsuo KUWAMURA (Chukyo University, Nagoya)
    Vice-President:
    Mariko HASEGAWA (Waseda University, Tokyo)
    Secretary:
    Michio IMAFUKU (Kyoto University, Kyoto)
    Treasurer:
    Hisashi FUJII (Kyoto University, Kyoto)
    Council Members:
    Mariko HASEGAWA (Waseda University, Tokyo)
    Toshikazu HASEGAWA (University of Tokyo, Tokyo)
    Eiiti KASUYA (Kyushu University, Fukuoka)
    Michio IMAFUKU (Kyoto University, Kyoto)
    Yoh IWASA (Kyushu University, Fukuoka)
    Masakado KAWATA (Tohoku University, Sendai)
    Masahiro KON (Shiga Prefectural University, Shiga)
    Yasuhiro NAKASHIMA (Miyagi University, Sendai)
    Yutaka SAITO (Hokkaido University, Sapporo)
    Keisuke UEDA (Rikkyo University, Tokyo)
    Editor: Kazuki Tsuji iUniversity of the Ryukyus, Japan j
    Associate editor:
    Yukio YASUI (Kagawa University, Japan)
    Editorial Board:
    Shinichi Akimoto (Hokkaido University, Japan)

    51. Ethology Primer
    much like us). Behaviour (ethology, in technical terms) is often aconfusing subject to ponder for the above reasons. We tend to
    http://users.capu.net/~kwelch/pp/ethology/primer.html
    The behaviour of most birds is complex. Unlike the situation with human beings, anyone investigating penguin behaviour just can't go up to a penguin and ask him "How are you feeling?" It doesn't work like that. So what remains is observation and interpretation. Much of behaviour is theoretical and postulation. Some of behaviour is concrete (what will happen if you sever this nerve, etc.). So, we have to think of behaviour in non-human terms. We have to avoid assessing penguins in terms of human behaviour. They aren't like us, and they don't act like us. They perform certain acts that we are incapable of performing, and they perform others for inconsistent reasons (much like us). Behaviour (ethology, in technical terms) is often a confusing subject to ponder for the above reasons. We tend to assume that animals act like us in some manner or that for our own understanding, we try to make it seem like they do. Even the most complex non-human animals execute some genetic programs that are unhindered by though processes. As you read these next three pages, refrain from thinking about what human beings do. When you think about breaking down animal behaviour in this case penguin behaviour one should think about answering four general questions:
    • What is the survival value of the behaviour?

    52. Graduate Program In Ethology And Evolutionary Psychology
    Graduate Program in ethology and Evolutionary Psychology.Department of Psychology, University of Arizona.
    http://psych.arizona.edu/eep.html
    Graduate Program in
    Ethology and Evolutionary Psychology
    Department of Psychology, University of Arizona
    Program Description
    Current Research Projects

    Program Faculty

    Contact Information
    Program Description
    The Ethology and Evolutionary Psychology (EEP) Program also offers a graduate minor in Behavioral Evolution And Development (BEAD) , with an interdisciplinary emphasis. The required core course for this minor, The Design of the Mind: Genes, Adaptation, and Behavior T he major focus of the Ethology and Evolutionary Psychology Program is research, and graduate students are expected to spend the majority of their time in its pursuit. It is not essential that new students work directly on projects currently underway, though most find it helpful to at least start this way.
    Current Research Projects
    Invertebrate Psychology Laboratory
    Development of invertebrate models for both research and instructional applications in comparative psychobiology. Behavioral principles studied include orthokinesis, klinokinesis, chemotaxis, tropotaxis, phototaxis, optomotor anemotaxis, unconditioned reflexes, sequenced fixed action patterns, olfactory and acoustic communication, social dominance, habituation and sensitization, classical and instrumental conditioning, behavioral genetics and behavioral laterality. Invertebrate taxa utilized include ciliates, coelenterates, nematodes, planaria, mollusks, aquatic and terrestrial arthropods.
    Ongoing research into associative and nonassociative conditioning of semiochemical and bioacoustic responsiveness in insects, including the development of (a) the foraging, stinging and feeding responses to prey kairomones in parasitoid wasps, (b) the orienting, courting and mating responses to sex pheromones in moths, (c) the acoustic sexual communication and associated spatial abilities in crickets.

    53. Ethology And The Web: Observing Respondent Behaviour In Web Surveys
    ethology and the Web Observing respondent behaviour in Web surveys.Andrew Jeavons. Web surveys ethology and the Web. Observing behaviour
    http://w3.one.net/~andrewje/ethology.html
    Ethology and the Web: Observing respondent behaviour in Web surveys. Andrew Jeavons Introduction The Instrument Interface Ethology and the Web Observing behaviour, ethology, can often be surprising. While the outcome of a behaviour can be the same across individuals, what different people do to achieve that outcome can vary greatly. Animals of all sorts, humans included, will often embellish a behaviour which leads to a desired out come with other, so called "superstitious" behaviours. With WAI we have an opportunity to observe the behaviour of respondents in relatively new environment. The barriers we have, the intervening technology, can both help us see what respondents do and hide what they do. This paper is an experiment in exploring what we can glean from the available data about how respondents behave during WAI. It isn't intended to be comprehensive. Data Sources
  • Data on the number of failures (that is when the respondent terminated or left the interview without completing it) on per question basis. Data on the number of repeats (that is where the question is represented to the respondent usually because it was completed incorrectly) on per question basis.
  • 54. Ethology - Wikipedia
    ethology. ethology is the study of animal behaviour with a special attentionto the natural environment and physiological, evolutionary aspects.
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethology
    Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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    Help
    Other languages: Polski
    Ethology
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Ethology is the study of animal behaviour with a special attention to the natural environment and physiological, evolutionary aspects. The term was coined from the French by the zoologist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire An earlier, slightly different sense of the term, however, was proposed by John Stuart Mill in his System of Logic . He recommended the development of a new science, "ethology," whose purpose would be the explanation of individual and national differences in character, on the basis of associationistic psychology. This use of the word was never adopted, however. See also: Konrad Lorenz
    Edit this page
    Discuss this page Older versions ... Related changes
    Other languages: Polski
    Main Page
    About Wikipedia Recent changes
    It was last modified 23:52 Oct 30, 2002. All text is available under the terms of the

    55. Philosophy Of Cognitive Ethology: Entry
    1. What is cognitive ethology? The simplest characterization to cognitive science.2. Initial criticisms of cognitive ethology Back to contents.
    http://host.uniroma3.it/progetti/kant/field/ceth.htm
    Contents
  • What is cognitive ethology?
  • Initial criticisms of cognitive ethology
  • Links between philosophy and cognitive ethology
  • Folk psychology and cognitive ethology ...
    consciousness, theory of mind, and evolutionary psychology
    What is cognitive ethology?
    The simplest characterization of cognitive ethology is that it is the marriage of cognitive science and ethology. But simple characterizations of any marriage should never be trusted, and this one masks some fundamental tensions between the two partners. Cognitive science is an umbrella term for convergent approaches to the study of mind in linguistics, artificial intelligence, cognitive psychology, and, increasingly the neurosciences. Cognitive psychology emerged during the latter half of the 20th century primarily as a laboratory science. Countless thousands of undergraduate students have partially met course requirements by reporting to fluorescent-lighted, windowless rooms in the basements of campus psychology buildings, where they have been subjected to questions about everything from nonsense syllables to subliminal visual cues, all in an effort to probe the inner workings of the sophomore mind. Modern neuroscience, with the advent of fMRI is increasingly shepherding these same students into brightly-lit rooms where they can perform similar tasks while their heads are encased by large magnets. Classical ethology has, on the other hand, typically emphasized the importance of observing animals under more-or-less natural conditions, with the objective of understanding the evolution, adaptation (function), causation, and development of the species-specific behavioral repertoire (
  • 56. Cognitive Ethology: Annotated Bibliography
    Philosophy of Cognitive ethology Annotated Bibliography by Colin Allen. 1978. Prospects for a cognitive ethology. BBS 4 527538).
    http://host.uniroma3.it/progetti/kant/field/cethbiblio.htm
    Philosophy of Cognitive Ethology:
    Annotated Bibliography by Colin Allen Rationale and organization of the bibliography A brief introduction to cognitive ethology can be found in the overview that accompanies this bibliography. Given the amount of indeterminacy about the boundaries of the field of cognitive ethology (discussed in the overview) there is corresponding indeterminacy about the scope of this annotated bibliography. With a few exceptions, I have decided to limit the entries to works in the philosophy of cognitive ethology, a nascent subspecialty straddling the borders of philosophy of mind, philosophy of biology, and philosophy of science. This is not to say that all the listed works are authored by professional philosophers - far from it - but works by professional scientists are generally limited to those that deal with methodological issues facing attempts to study animal cognition in natural conditions. Thus, in general, I have not included scientific papers whose primary contribution is empirical rather than theoretical, nor have I included pieces on the controversies surrounding ape language or `theory of mind' in primates which although of evolutionary interest have not generally been conducted in naturalistic settings. (Those looking for references into the broader scientific literature are referred to this unannotated bibliography Entries are arranged primarily in chronological rather than alphabetical order, except where it seemed natural to group works that form a single corpus, or to group critical articles with the items that prompted them.

    57. Journal Of Ethology Homepage
    Journal of ethology. published by Japan Ethological Society. Journal of ethologyis covered in Current Contents and SCI. in Japanese. Vol 1 Vol. 17.
    http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/jes2/JE.html
    Journal of Ethology
    published by Japan Ethological Society Journal of Ethology is covered in Current Contents and SCI
    in Japanese
    Vol 1 - Vol. 17 Vol. 18 (2000)- (Springer)
    Editor in chief:
    Associate editor: Editorial board
    • Shinichi Akimoto (Hokkaido University, Japan)
    • Takahiro Asami (Shinshu University, Japan)
    • Burney Le Boeuf (University of California Santa Cruz, USA)
    • Anders Brodin (Lund University, Sweden)
    • Nancy Burley (University of California-Irvine, USA)
    • Jae C. Choe (Seoul National University, Korea)
    • Marcel Dicke (Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands)
    • Robert W. Elwood (The Queen's University of Belfast, UK)
    • Michael H. Ferkin (University of Memphis, USA)
    • Go Fujita (University of Tokyo, Japan)
    • Kazuo Fujita (Kyoto University, Japan)
    • Raghavendra Gadagkar (Indian Institute of Science, India)
    • Darryl Gwynne (University of Toronto, Canada)
    • Kazuhide Hashiya (Kyoto University, Japan)
    • Kenji Karino, (Tokyo Gakugei University, Japan)
    • Sachiko Koyama (University of Tokyo, Japan)

    58. Journal Of Ethology Homepage
    Journal of ethology. ? (Japan EthologicalSociety). NEW! Vol 18 (2000)
    http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/jes2/JE_J.html
    Journal of Ethology
    iJapan Ethological Societyj‚ª”­s‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚Ü‚·
    NEW! Vol 18 (2000) ‚æ‚è Springer ŽÐ‚æ‚è”­s‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¨‚è‚Ü‚·
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    ‰æ‘œ‚ðƒNƒŠƒbƒN‚·‚é‚ÆSpringer‚É‚ ‚é Journal of Ethology ‚̃y[ƒW‚ªŠJ‚«‚Ü‚·B
    Vol. 18ˆÈ~‚̏î•ñ‚ÍSpringer‚̃y[ƒW‚Å‚²——‚¢‚½‚¾‚¯‚Ü‚·B
    Vol 17 ‚Ü‚Å Vol 18 ‚©‚ç
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    • Burney Le Boeuf (University of California Santa Cruz, USA)
    • Anders Brodin (Lund University, Sweden)
    • Nancy Burley (University of California-Irvine, USA)
    • Jae C. Choe (Seoul National University, Korea)
    • Marcel Dicke (Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands)
    • Robert W. Elwood (The Queen's University of Belfast, UK)
    • Michael H. Ferkin (University of Memphis, USA)
    • “¡“c@„@@i“Œ‹ž‘åŠwj
    • “¡“c@˜a¶@i‹ž“s‘åŠwj
    • Raghavendra Gadagkar (Indian Institute of Science, India)
    • Darryl Gwynne (University of Toronto, Canada)
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    • H“¡@Tˆê@i––勳ˆç‘åŠwj
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    • ‰ªƒm’Jˆê•v@iç—t‘åŠwj
    • Mark J. Scriber (Michigan State University, USA)

    59. The KLI Theory Lab - Keywords - Ethology
    ethology. ethology and sociobiology Keywords deceptive communication• ethology • sociobiology • stability • threat displays.
    http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Keyword/E/etho.html
    ethology This keyword was found on the following pages:
    Adams, E.S.
    Mesterton-Gibbons, M. 1995. The cost of threat displays and the stability of deceptive communication. Journal of Theoretical Biology Keywords: deceptive communication ethology sociobiology stability ... Csányi, V. 1990. The role of eyespots in predator recognition and antipredatory behaviour of the paradise fish, Macropodus opercularis L. Ethology Keywords: ethology eyespots paradise fish predator recognition ... Thornhill, R. /Rowe, L. 1997. Evolution of animal genitalia: Genital and non-genital morphology correlates of fitness components in a water strider. Journal of Evolutionary Biology abstract .pdf Keywords: ethology sociobiology
    Barlow, G.W.
    1989. Has sociobiology killed ethology or revitalized it? In Bateson/Klopfer, Perspectives in Ethology, vol. 8. Keywords: ethology future of ethology sociobiology
    Barlow, G.W.
    /Silverberg, J., eds. 1980. Sociobiology: Beyond Nature/Nurture? Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Keywords: ethology nature/nurture debate sociobiology
    Baron-Cohen, S.
    , ed. 1997. The Maladapted Mind: Classic Readings in Evolutionary Psychopathology.

    60. The KLI Theory Lab - Keywords - Cognitive Ethology
    cognitive ethology. This keyword was found on the following pages Allen, C./Bekoff,M. 1995c. Cognitive ethology and the intentionality of animal behavior.
    http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Keyword/C/CognEtho.html
    cognitive ethology This keyword was found on the following pages:
    Allen, C.
    Bekoff, M. 1995. Cognitive ethology and the intentionality of animal behavior. Mind and Language Keywords: animal behavior cognitive ethology intentionality
    Beck, B.B.
    1982. Chimpocentrism: Bias in cognitive ethology. Journal of Human Evolution Keywords: bias chimpanzee cognitive ethology
    Bekoff, M.
    1994. Cognitive ethology and the treatment of nonhuman animals: How matters of mind inform matters of welfare. Animal Welfare Keywords: cognitive ethology treatment of animals
    Bekoff, M.
    Cognitive ethology and the explanation of nonhuman animal behavior. In Roitblat/Meyer, Comparative Approaches to Cognitive Science Keywords: cognitive ethology explanation of animal behavior
    Bekoff, M.
    1996. Cognitive ethology, vigilance, information gathering, and representation: Who might know what and why? Behavioural Processes Keywords: cognitive ethology information gathering representation vigilance ... Allen, C. 1992. Intentional icons: Towards an evolutionary cognitive ethology. Ethology Keywords: cognitive ethology intentional icons
    Bekoff, M.

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