IBIO 313 Exam 1
aggression
a trait that is heritable
function (4 questions)
adaptive function relevance to fitness/survival and natural selection
learning flexibility
adaptive modification at any life stage
radical behaviorism
all behavior is learned
phylogeny (4 questions)
ancestory/evolutionary history of behavior/decision-making
-learn about humans through studying animal models -labs give experimental control -learning -assumption-behavior develops through learning not instinct
animal psychology (4) early 20th century
The Umwelt concept
animals live in a species specific, subjective world (sensory data to internal world gives action to objects)
-salience of external stimuli -changes in internal state
classes of influence in motivation and behavior repertoires
behavioral flexibility
behavioral development changes over lifespan
phylogenetic evidence for nature
behavioral traits show similar patterns to other traits
key figures in ethology
Niko Tinbergen Konrad Lorenz Karl von Frisch Jakob von Uexkull Charles Darwin
genetics
how to explain variation in behavior based on age, sex, individual, etc
classical ethology
learned and instinctive
learning as instinct
learning attends to certain cues, not others (basic phenomenon)
developmental evidence for nature
many behavioral traits develop independent of experience
genes and environment, learned and instinctive
modern view of behavioral development
mutation screen
molecular genetic approach
traits can be in a state of compromise or reflect trade-offs (problems of imperfection)
consequences of behavior
cross-fostering
control environment
comparing relatives
control environment using 'common garden', take environment out of the mix, they grow up in the same environment
supernormal stimuli
different arrangement of color gave a better response (herring gull recognizing parent)
unexplained data
distance of dot from prediction line
natural selection
driver of adaptive evolutionary change, differential success of inherited variance, needs variation among members of same population, inheritance and differential 'success' correlating to phenotype
experiments in testing
used to rule out competing hypotheses and control confounding variables
physical mechanisms ontogeny
proximate questions (how)
artificial selection
selective breeding, needs some heritability to work, response to selection needs high heritability in order to have specific, goal offspring
-innate -automatically trigger/release an instinctive response
sign stimuli requirements (2)
species specificity
some species need to learn what their parent looks like (ducks and chickens)
humans see things/colors differently than other animals, our sensory worlds are not the same
the results of Karl von Frisch study of the unwelt concept (honeybees)
cue specificity
what stimuli can elicit the following and imprinting (movement, sound, size)
physiological causation (4 questions)
what stimuli is involved
-sexual selection -natural selection
which 2 forces result in adaptive evolutionary change?
Konrad Lorenz
who believed in classical ethology
Jakob von Uexkull
who came up with Umwelt concept
konrad lorenz
who studied imprinting
Karl von Frisch
who was the person who studied hoeybees and the umwelt concept
correlational approach to testing
infer effects on fitness
nature
-behavioral traits are stereotypes and species-specific -homology of anatomy and behavior
aspects of fixed action pattern
-extended sequences -stereotyped -species specific -elicited by simple stimulus -all or none fashion -in-born/innate -once begun, no sensory feedback needed
Charles Darwin
-first ethologist -continuity vs. diversity of form (evolution by process of 'descent with modification') -complexity and adaptation - 'design' (biological designs and natural selection)
motivation and behavioral repertoires
-relationship to 'decision-making'/'action selection' -salience of external stimuli -changes in internal state -ethogram is how they study animals
learning speed in honeybees and personality in dogs
2 examples of artificial selection
watson and skinner
2 people who believed in radical behaviorism
-fine-tuning behavior to environment -species differ at degree of flexibility -behavior has been shaped by natural selection
3 aspects of behavioral flexibility
-observed in Living organism -conditions for expression must be right -behavior is fluid, dynamic and vuariable
3 challenges with studying behavior
1. inferring causation from correlation 2. multiple causation 3. answering questions about the evolutionary past
3 things you can't do with hypotheses
-critical period/sensitive period -irreversibility -cue specificity -species specificity
4 constraints on imprinting
-genetic drift -mutation -gene flow -inbreeding
4 forces that are non-adaptive evolutionary change
-isolation -hybridization -compare relatives -heritability -artificial selection -cross-fostering
6 phenotypic genetic approaches
key figures in psychology
Ivan Pavlov Edward Thordike J.B. Watson B.F. Skinner
fixed action pattern (classical ethology) weird bird video
Konrad Lorenz hypothesized fundamental 'units' of behavior
1. observe patterns in nature 2. ask questions about patterns 3. formulate hypotheses (tentative answers to questions) 4. deduce predictions made by hypotheses 5. perform experiments or observations to test predictions
Scientific method (5 steps)
-physiological causation -ontogeny/development -phylogeny -function
Tinberg's Four Questions
logic of mutation screen genetic approach
cause mutations (x-ray, chemical) and screen for their effects
ontogeny/development (4 questions)
changes over life span of animal, learning/maturation
-studying animal for its own sake -natural behavior -natural environments -instinct -evolution of instincts
ethology (5) early 20th century
charles darwin vs george darwin (grandson)
example of comparing relatives genetic approach
cricket chirping, long calling dads give offspring with long calling, with some short calling
example of comparing relatives in 'common garden'
cliff swallows and their colony size, they preferred colony sizes they were born into, not raised in
example of cross-fostering
migratory direction
example of hybridization genetic approach
migratory direction in blackcaps, even handraised birds show preferred migratory direction
example of isolation genetic approach
flies with shock, test memory, dunce flies have wiped out learning ability
example of mutation screen genetic approach
imprinting
formation of an attachment by one animal on another, can be anything
nature vs. nurture
genes vs environment
you come up with predictions to the question you asked and then test them to try to falsify hypotheses
how are predictions used to test hypotheses?
hypotheses are tentative questions/plausible guess to an answer
how do hypotheses relate to questions?
experimental approach
hypothesis: song functions to defend territory -remove birds and replace with songs
goal of mutation screen genetic approach
identify specific genes that influence expression of behavior
learning as instinct (classic example)
imprinting, bird song, digger wasp spatial learning
hypotheses
in the form of a statement
heritability
measures strength of genetic effects, quantify relative similarities, leans more toward middle mark due to environment and genes both having an effect (regression toward the mean), correlation coefficient
filial imprinting
offspring imprints on parent
behavior as part of biology, comparative anatomy
original ethologists thought...
supernormal stimuli
oystercatcher prefers bigger/ostrich egg not its own, mechanisms evolutionary implications
some traits don't fossilize so you can't trace its evolutionary past (eyes)
problem with tracing evolutionary past
function
questions about adaptive value
it is just the color red that sets three-spined sticklebacks off/aggression
results of Niko Tinberg's experiment
homology
similarity because of a shared ancestry
homoplasy
similarity because of independent/convergent evolution
sign stimuli
simple stimulus that represents a meaningful social of ecological partner
trait-oriented
start with a trait, ask how that trait affects survival and reproduction
problem-oriented
start with challenges to survival and reproduction and ask what are the traits that enable the animal to solve problems
evolutionary change
successful individuals leave more offspring (more copies of their genes) changing population composition
directional selection
the mean shifts, ex. generation two is shifted towards faster moving animals
disruptive selection
the mean stays the same, polymorphism, there are two humps with a ditch in the middle
stabilizing selection
the mean stays the same, the population just becomes more concentrated around the mean
critical period/sensitive period
time window within which the model must be exposed to animal capable of imprinting (15 hrs posthatch)
mendelian inheritance
trait you are studying is influenced by a single genetic locus, not usually the case
polygenic inheritance
trait you are studying is influenced by more than one loci, most traits are like this, distributed as normal bell-curve
-imprinting -song development
two case studies of behavioral development
behavioral development and learning (adaptive behavioral flexibility at given life)
two forms of behavioral flexibility
patterns/puzzles we see (pattern) and causal processes/performances (process)
two types of questions
phylogeny function
ultimate questions (why)
-variation -inheritance -differential success
what 3 things does natural selection need?
the study of history and function
what are the so-called 'ultimate questions' about biological traits?
eyes
what is an example of a homologous trait in all vertebrates?
eyes
what is an example of homoplasy of mollusca and vertebrata
interaction between genes and environment
what is variation in behavior influenced by?
adaptation
why do animals do what they do?
trait-oriented examples
why do birds sing? why mostly males? why mostly in breeding season?