Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior

=Option E Neurobiology and Behaviour= =Introduction and Examples of Behaviour= State that behaviour in animals is related to the environmental context State that innate behaviour develops independently of the environmental context whereas learned behaviour reflects conditions experienced by individu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Book
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/IB_Biology/Option_E_-_Neurobiology_and_Behavior
id ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:12731:72894
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:12731:72894 2023-06-18T03:39:41+02:00 Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/IB_Biology/Option_E_-_Neurobiology_and_Behavior eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2023-06-02T13:41:25Z =Option E Neurobiology and Behaviour= =Introduction and Examples of Behaviour= State that behaviour in animals is related to the environmental context State that innate behaviour develops independently of the environmental context whereas learned behaviour reflects conditions experienced by individuals during development. Explain the role of natural selection in the development of behaviour patterns An organism may develop a certain behaviour which makes it better suited to its environment. For example a learned behaviour allows the species to obtain food with ease. Possessing a certain behaviour will increase the likelihood of a species and its offspring to survive and thus more and more of a species will develop this behaviour. Explain using species of birds or animals one example of each of the types of behavior migration grooming communication courtship and mate selection. Migration Arctic tern swallow white stork blue whale Grooming Rhesus monkeys will groom one another. This is a sign of respect as lower ranking members will groom higher ranking ones. Also grooming may be addictive for the monkeys due to the release of endorphins while grooming Communication bird songs alarm responses and hierarchal dominance patterns in wolves and red deer Courtship male display (ex peacock mallard duck great crested grebe blue footed boobie) Mate selection territory and song (birds) or combat (stags) Explain the need for quantitative data in studies of behaviour Studies of animal behaviour usually begin with careful observations from researchers. These careful observations allow us to understand the natural history of a species and often lead to the formation of a hypothesis. From here we can test the hypothesis by collecting quantitative data. Then according to this data we can then establish confidence levels for the data by statistical tests. =Perception of Stimulus= State that sensory receptors act as energy transducers Sensory receptors act as energy transducers. All sensory receptors convert energy from the ... Book Arctic Arctic tern Blue whale WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks Arctic Peacock ENVELOPE(169.450,169.450,-72.217,-72.217)
institution Open Polar
collection WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
op_collection_id ftwikibooks
language English
description =Option E Neurobiology and Behaviour= =Introduction and Examples of Behaviour= State that behaviour in animals is related to the environmental context State that innate behaviour develops independently of the environmental context whereas learned behaviour reflects conditions experienced by individuals during development. Explain the role of natural selection in the development of behaviour patterns An organism may develop a certain behaviour which makes it better suited to its environment. For example a learned behaviour allows the species to obtain food with ease. Possessing a certain behaviour will increase the likelihood of a species and its offspring to survive and thus more and more of a species will develop this behaviour. Explain using species of birds or animals one example of each of the types of behavior migration grooming communication courtship and mate selection. Migration Arctic tern swallow white stork blue whale Grooming Rhesus monkeys will groom one another. This is a sign of respect as lower ranking members will groom higher ranking ones. Also grooming may be addictive for the monkeys due to the release of endorphins while grooming Communication bird songs alarm responses and hierarchal dominance patterns in wolves and red deer Courtship male display (ex peacock mallard duck great crested grebe blue footed boobie) Mate selection territory and song (birds) or combat (stags) Explain the need for quantitative data in studies of behaviour Studies of animal behaviour usually begin with careful observations from researchers. These careful observations allow us to understand the natural history of a species and often lead to the formation of a hypothesis. From here we can test the hypothesis by collecting quantitative data. Then according to this data we can then establish confidence levels for the data by statistical tests. =Perception of Stimulus= State that sensory receptors act as energy transducers Sensory receptors act as energy transducers. All sensory receptors convert energy from the ...
format Book
title Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
spellingShingle Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
title_short Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
title_full Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
title_fullStr Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: IB Biology/Option E - Neurobiology and Behavior
title_sort wikibooks: ib biology/option e - neurobiology and behavior
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/IB_Biology/Option_E_-_Neurobiology_and_Behavior
long_lat ENVELOPE(169.450,169.450,-72.217,-72.217)
geographic Arctic
Peacock
geographic_facet Arctic
Peacock
genre Arctic
Arctic tern
Blue whale
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic tern
Blue whale
_version_ 1769004402763366400