The Development and integration of behaviour : essays in honour of Robert Hinde

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The Development and integration of behaviour : essays in honour of Robert Hinde

edited by Patrick Bateson

Cambridge University Press, 1991

  • pbk.

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 34

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

What regularities lie behind the development and organization of behaviour in animals and humans? One theme emerging from this book is that ideas have to flow in both directions between the different levels of analysis - between the neural and behavioural levels and between the individual and the social group. Another theme is that it is not enough to identify the many factors operating in the development and integration of behaviour. The processes must also be studied directly. Bringing together work at different levels and studying behavioural dynamics require more knowledge and expertise than any one person can usually command. Links have to be made between different disciplines and specialists have to learn to work with others who speak with what at first seem to be mutually incomprehensible scientific languages. The book illustrates how this may be achieved. The themes of this book are strongly related to the approach of Robert Hinde, in whose honour the chapters were written.

目次

  • Contributors
  • Preface
  • Part I. Introduction: 1. Levels and processes Patrick Bateson
  • Part II. The Development of Behaviour: 2. Are there principles of behavioural development? Patrick Bateson
  • 3. Differences in behavioural development in closely related species: bird song Peter Marler
  • Commentary 1 Robert A. Hinde
  • Part III. Neural and Endocrine Aspects of Behaviour: 4. Analytical ethology and synthetic neuroscience John C. Fentress
  • 5. Cerebral function and behaviour investigated through a study of filial imprinting Gabriel Horn
  • 6. How does the environment influence the behavioural action of hormones? J. B. Hutchison
  • 7. Testosterone, attention and memory R. J. Andrew
  • 8. A psychobiological approach to maternal behaviour among the primates Jay S. Rosenblatt
  • Commentary 2 Robert A. Hinde
  • Part IV. Social Organisation: 9. The evolution of sex differences and the consequences of polygyny in mammals T. H. Clutton-Brock
  • 10. What can we say about social structure? Thelma E. Rowell
  • 11. On declaring commitment to a partner M. J. A. Simpson
  • Commentary 3 Robert A. Hinde
  • Part V. Human Behaviour: 12. Ethological light on psychoanalytical problems John Bowlby
  • 13. Temperament and attachment: an eclectic approach Joan Stevenson-Hinde
  • 14. A fresh look at 'maternal deprivation' Michael Rutter
  • 15. Relationships and behaviour: the significance of Robert Hinde's work for developmental psychology Judy Dunn
  • 16. The individual and the environment in human behavioural development Marian Radke-Yarrow
  • Commentary 4 Robert A. Hinde
  • Part VI. Aggression and War: 17. An evolutionary perspective on human aggression David A. Hamburg
  • Commentary 5 Robert A. Hinde
  • Part VII. Memoirs: 18. Some personal remarks Niko Tinbergen
  • 19. Robert Hinde in Africa Jane Goodall
  • Commentary 6 Robert A. Hinde
  • Appendices
  • Index.

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