In a sense, ethology and Jungian psychology can be viewed as two sides of the same coin. |
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Qualitative ethology is particularly useful when participants cannot be interviewed or when detailed reporting is desired. |
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This is, for instance, the accepted research method in ethology, and behaviorism. |
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This intellectual travelogue takes readers on a tour through ethology, the scientific discipline focusing on animal behavior. |
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Other lemurs in the forest respond in similar ways to the fat-tail, according to Peter Kappeler, head of ethology and ecology at the center. |
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In 1965 Goodall earned her Ph.D. in ethology from England's Cambridge University. |
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Patrick Bateson is professor of ethology at the University of Cambridge's zoology department, of which he has also been head. |
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Konner knows enough ethology to have helpful ways of discussing old questions such as the relationship between nature and nurture. |
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In the mid-twentieth century, better methods and better models of natural selection drove the field of animal behavior back to ethology. |
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Do we not need to rethink ethology by extending it to the plant and the artefact? |
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The physiological ethology of stress in reptiles can inform views about the possible evolutionary antecedents of coping responses in other taxa, not least humans. |
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He subsequently built up a research group for laboratory animal ethology at the University of Zurich. |
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It's up to the rider to speak horse ยป: the equestrian ethology is a method that comes from the horse whisperers and behaviourists. |
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One more classic, from ethology, is Philip Lehner's Handbook of Ethological Methods. |
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When he asks about the evolution of humans, for example, he focuses on ancestral DNA rather than on conjectures about hominid ethology. |
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Thus, Darwin's legacy has stimulated the study of motivation and provided a foundation for comparative psychology and for ethology. |
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Since then motivational models in ethology have moved away from conceptions of energy generation and toward other ways of thinking. |
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Behavioural observations are to be made by a trained person, particularly in reference to the knowledge of the ethology of the species. |
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In these circumstances the simple rules of ethology laid down by Konrad Lorenz become applicable to humans. |
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Is the raising of all these new questions leading to a rethinking of ethology? |
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Taste and interest in wildlife programmes will move away from natural history towards animal ethology. |
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While bringing insights from other disciplines to ethology and ornithology, John also used ethological concepts to approach problems in other fields. |
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Our hypothesis accords with classical ethology insofar as the emphasis is on stimulation, but it rests on reproductive conflict and manipulation rather than on cooperation. |
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Human ethology is the science which studies the behaviour of Man in his environment, in order to understand and optimise Individual-Environment interaction. |
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And why not open up ethology to animal culture? |
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This became the subject of Quanddleloupphabiteraavecl'agneau, a recent history of ethology that show how researchers and animals have changed one another. |
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Today the debates concerning biotechnology and the management of the planet require scientists and citizens to share both the certainties and uncertainties in the fields of genetics, ecology or ethology. |
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The order as a whole has been the subject of much scientific investigation, leading to important studies on speciation, ecology, ethology, migration, anatomy, and physiology. |
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The question of animal cultures, and of associations between humans and animals, does indeed cause us to reconsider the meaning we give to ethology. |
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Expertise required: veterinary medicine, animal health, animal welfare, bacteriology, virology, parasitology, epidemiology, ethology, pathology, zootechnics, physiology. |
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Appointed senior scientist in 1994, Markus Stauffacher has since been responsible for education and research in ethology, animal husbandry and animal welfare at ETH Zurich. |
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The challenge to meet is to develop strategies of management based on scientific knowledge in biology and ethology of the small cetaceans and in socio-economics, uses and culture. |
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Later, the growth of ethology based on rigorous observation of animal behaviour caused attention to turn once again to the nerve structures underlying stereotyped and innate forms of behaviour. |
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The research is published in the current edition of Ethology, Ecology and Evolution. |
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Tombazian has consulted with over 50 companies of all sizes and from a wide range of industries, some of which include Tallwave, Ethology and Harley Davidson University. |
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Fresh carcasses lying around reduced a trap's effectiveness, though apparently not as terrifying warnings, the researchers report in an upcoming issue of Ethology. |
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