APA Handbook of Comparative Psychology
Volume 1: Basic Concepts, Methods, Neural Substrate, and Behavior Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Herausgeber: Call, Josep
APA Handbook of Comparative Psychology
Volume 1: Basic Concepts, Methods, Neural Substrate, and Behavior Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Herausgeber: Call, Josep
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This two-volume handbook presents the different aspects of comparative psychology—behavior, cognition, learning, and neurophysiology—in a balanced and exhaustive manner.
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This two-volume handbook presents the different aspects of comparative psychology—behavior, cognition, learning, and neurophysiology—in a balanced and exhaustive manner.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: American Psychological Association (APA)
- Seitenzahl: 1856
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 300mm x 236mm x 127mm
- Gewicht: 5126g
- ISBN-13: 9781433823480
- ISBN-10: 1433823489
- Artikelnr.: 47280926
- Verlag: American Psychological Association (APA)
- Seitenzahl: 1856
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 300mm x 236mm x 127mm
- Gewicht: 5126g
- ISBN-13: 9781433823480
- ISBN-10: 1433823489
- Artikelnr.: 47280926
Editor-in-Chielf Josep Call
Volume 1: Basic Concepts, Methods, Neural Substrate, and Behavior
Editorial Board
About the Editor-in-Chief
Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction
Part I: History and Basic Concepts
Chapter 1: What Is Comparative Psychology?
Josep Call, Gordon M. Burghardt, Irene M. Pepperberg, Charles T. Snowdon,
and Thomas R. Zentall
Chapter 2: Trends and Themes in the History of Comparative Psychology
Donald A. Dewsbury
Part II: Methods
Chapter 3: Studying Animal Behavior: Integration of Field and Laboratory
Approaches
Charles T. Snowdon and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 4: Observational and Experimental Methods in Comparative Psychology
Ken Yasukawa and Kristin E. Bonnie
Chapter 5: Collecting Biologically Relevant Information: DNA to Population
Density
Tobias Deschner, Mimi Arandjelovic, and Hjalmar S. Kühl
Chapter 6: Tools for Measuring Animal Cognition: T Mazes to Touchscreens
David A. Washburn, J. Antonio Salamanca, Rachel C. Callery, and William
Whitham
Chapter 7: Neurons to Networks: Integrative Methods for Studying Social
Behavior
Eileen A. Lacey and Nancy G. Solomon
Chapter 8: From Nonparametric Tests to Mixed Models: A Brief Overview of
Statistical Tools Frequently Used in Comparative Psychology
Roger Mundry
Chapter 9: Methods and Applications of Animal Personality Research
Alexander Weiss and Drew M. Altschul
Chapter 10: Phylogenetic Approaches for Research in Comparative Cognition
Evan L. MacLean and Charles L. Nunn
Part III: Adaptation, Evolution, and Phylogeny
Chapter 11: Behavioral Variation, Adaptation, and Evolution
Delia S. Shelton and Emília P. Martins
Chapter 12: Evolution of Learning and Cognition
Nathan J. Emery
Chapter 13: Evolution and Consequences of Sociality
Judith Maria Burkart
Chapter 14: The Evolution of Language
Michael C. Corballis
Chapter 15: Evolutionary Approaches to Human Psychology
Gillian R. Brown and Catharine P. Cross
Chapter 16: Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive Effects of Domestication
Ruth C. Newberry
Part IV: Genes, Hormones, and Ontogeny
Chapter 17: From Instinct to Behavior Systems: An Integrated Approach to
Ethological Psychology
Gordon M. Burghardt and Robert Ian Bowers
Chapter 18: The Rise of Behavioral Genetics and the Transition to
Behavioral Genomics and Beyond
Oliver Krüger, Peter Korsten, and Joseph I. Hoffman
Chapter 19: Behavioral Endocrinology and Development
Elizabeth Adkins-Regan
Chapter 20: Cognitive Development in Comparative Perspective: Exploring the
Role of Language Acquisition in Spatial, Quantitative, and Memory
Development
Nora S. Newcombe
Chapter 21: Filial Attachment: Development, Mechanisms, and Consequences
Michael B. Hennessy and Harry N. Shair
Chapter 22: Epigenetic Mechanisms Shaping the Brain: Implications for
Psychological Science
Anthony P. Auger and Catherine J. Auger
Part V: Neural Substrate
Chapter 23: Instinctual Foundations of Animal Minds: Comparative
Perspectives on the Evolved Affective Neural Substrate of Emotions and
Learned Behaviors
Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 24: Comparative Vertebrate Nervous Systems
Andrew N. Iwaniuk and Douglas R. Wylie
Chapter 25: Parallel Processing of Spatial and Temporal Information in
Rodents and Humans: Role of the Hippocampus
Raymond Kesner
Chapter 26: The Biopsychology of Birdsong: Birdsong as a Biological Model
for Human Language
Kazuo Okanoya
Chapter 27: Laterality at the Neural, Cognitive, and Behavioral Levels
Giorgio Vallortigara and Elisabetta Versace
Chapter 28: Neural Networks, Learning, and Intelligence
Bruce J. MacLennan
Chapter 29: Biological Rhythms
Benjamin L. Smarr and Lance J. Kriegsfeld
Part VI: Behavior
Chapter 30: Information, Communication, and Language
Michael D. Beecher
Chapter 31: Referential Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Klaus Zuberbühler and Christof Neumann
Chapter 32: Symbolic Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 33: Interspecific Communication
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 34: Play and Exploration
Sergio M. Pellis and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 35: Maternal Behavior
Phyllis C. Lee
Chapter 36: Paternal and Alloparental Care
Charles T. Snowdon
Chapter 37: Courtship and Mate Choice
Michael J. Ryan and Lyndon A. Jordan
Chapter 38: Ingestive Behavior
Kurt Schwenk
Chapter 39: Predator–Prey Interactions: Integrating Fear Effects
Liana Y. Zanette and Michael Clinchy
Chapter 40: Antipredator Behavior
Akira Mori and Ryo Ito
Chapter 41: Why Animals Fight: Uncovering the Function and Mechanisms of
Territorial Aggression
Matthew J. Fuxjager, Xin Zhao, Nathan S. Rieger, and Catherine A. Marler
Chapter 42: Conflict Resolution
Teresa Romero and Filippo Aureli
Chapter 43: Friendships, Coalitions, and Alliances
Marina Cords and Nicole A. Thompson
Chapter 44: Comparative Studies of Cooperation: Collaboration and Prosocial
Behavior in Animals
Katherine A. Cronin
Chapter 45: Thermoregulation, Energetics, and Behavior
Christopher Harshaw, Mark S. Blumberg, and Jeffrey R. Alberts
Index
Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Editorial Board
Contributors
Part I: Perception, Attention, and Memory
Chapter 1: Animal Psychophysics: The Study of Sensation in Nonverbal
Organisms
John Malone
Chapter 2: Hearing and Communication
Georg M. Klump
Chapter 3: Comparative Visual Perception: An Overview
Olga F. Lazareva
Chapter 4: Chemoreception
Alicia Mathis and Adam L. Crane
Chapter 5: Perceptual and Functional Categorization in Animals
Ulrike Aust
Chapter 6: Object and Picture Perception
Shigeru Watanabe and Ulrike Aust
Chapter 7: Face Perception and Processing in Nonhuman Primates
Ikuma Adachi and Masaki Tomonaga
Chapter 8: Comparative Visual Illusions: Evolutionary, Cross-Cultural, and
Developmental Perspectives
Kazuo Fujita, Noriyuki Nakamura, Sota Watanabe, and Tomokazu Ushitani
Chapter 9: Selective and Divided Attention in Comparative Psychology
Walter T. Herbranson
Chapter 10: The Comparative Study of Working Memory
William A. Roberts and Angelo Santi
Chapter 11: Episodic-Like Memory and Mental Time Travel in Animals
Nicola S. Clayton
Part II: Learning and Motivation
Chapter 12: Ethological and Evolutionary Perspectives on Pavlovian
Conditioning
Mark A. Krause and Michael Domjan
Chapter 13: Comparative Learning and Evolution
Mauricio R. Papini and Carmen Torres
Chapter 14: On the Structure and Role of Optimality Models in the Study of
Behavior
Marco Vasconcelos, Inês Fortes, and Alex Kacelnik
Chapter 15: Decision Making: Rational and Irrational Choice
Thomas Zentall
Chapter 16: Decision Making Under Uncertainty: Preferences, Biases, and
Choice
Alexandra G. Rosati
Chapter 17: Relational Thinking in Animals and Humans: From Percepts to
Concepts
Ed Wasserman, Leyre Castro, and Joël Fagot
Chapter 18: Serial Learning
Greg Jensen
Chapter 19: The Comparative Psychology of Social Learning
Bennett G. Galef and Andrew Whiten
Chapter 20: Animal Social Learning, Culture, and Tradition
Kevin Laland and Cara Evans
Part III: Cognition and Emotion
Chapter 21: Spatial Cognition
Ken Cheng and Kate Jeffery
Chapter 22: Homing and Navigation
David J. Pritchard and Susan D. Healy
Chapter 23: Timing in Animals: From the Natural Environment to the
Laboratory, From Data to Models
Marco Vasconcelos, Marilia Pinheiro de Carvalho, and Armando Machado
Chapter 24: Intertemporal Choice and Delayed Gratification
Jeffrey R. Stevens
Chapter 25: Quantitative Cognition
Michael J. Beran
Chapter 26: Comparative Metaphysics: Thinking About Objects in Space and
Time
Trix Cacchione and Hannes Rakoczy
Chapter 27: Problem Solving
Amanda Seed and Carolina Mayer
Chapter 28: Animal Creativity and Innovation
Stan A. Kuczaj
Chapter 29: Causal and Inferential Reasoning in Animals
Christoph J. Völter and Josep Call
Chapter 30: Cognitive Insights From Tool Use in Nonhuman Animals
Elisabetta Visalberghi, Gloria Sabbatini, Alex H. Taylor, and Gavin R. Hunt
Chapter 31: The Comparative Psychology of Metacognition
Alexandria C. Zakrzewski, Jennifer M. Johnson, and J. David Smith
Chapter 32: Mind Reading in Animals?
Juliane Kaminski
Chapter 33: Reflecting on Mirror Self-Recognition: A Comparative View
Diana Reiss and Rachel Morrison
Chapter 34: Empathy Through the Ages: A Comparative Perspective on Rodent
Models of Shared Emotion
Jules B. Panksepp and Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 35: Animal Welfare Science
Michael Mendl, Georgia J. Mason, and Elizabeth S. Paul
Index
Editorial Board
About the Editor-in-Chief
Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction
Part I: History and Basic Concepts
Chapter 1: What Is Comparative Psychology?
Josep Call, Gordon M. Burghardt, Irene M. Pepperberg, Charles T. Snowdon,
and Thomas R. Zentall
Chapter 2: Trends and Themes in the History of Comparative Psychology
Donald A. Dewsbury
Part II: Methods
Chapter 3: Studying Animal Behavior: Integration of Field and Laboratory
Approaches
Charles T. Snowdon and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 4: Observational and Experimental Methods in Comparative Psychology
Ken Yasukawa and Kristin E. Bonnie
Chapter 5: Collecting Biologically Relevant Information: DNA to Population
Density
Tobias Deschner, Mimi Arandjelovic, and Hjalmar S. Kühl
Chapter 6: Tools for Measuring Animal Cognition: T Mazes to Touchscreens
David A. Washburn, J. Antonio Salamanca, Rachel C. Callery, and William
Whitham
Chapter 7: Neurons to Networks: Integrative Methods for Studying Social
Behavior
Eileen A. Lacey and Nancy G. Solomon
Chapter 8: From Nonparametric Tests to Mixed Models: A Brief Overview of
Statistical Tools Frequently Used in Comparative Psychology
Roger Mundry
Chapter 9: Methods and Applications of Animal Personality Research
Alexander Weiss and Drew M. Altschul
Chapter 10: Phylogenetic Approaches for Research in Comparative Cognition
Evan L. MacLean and Charles L. Nunn
Part III: Adaptation, Evolution, and Phylogeny
Chapter 11: Behavioral Variation, Adaptation, and Evolution
Delia S. Shelton and Emília P. Martins
Chapter 12: Evolution of Learning and Cognition
Nathan J. Emery
Chapter 13: Evolution and Consequences of Sociality
Judith Maria Burkart
Chapter 14: The Evolution of Language
Michael C. Corballis
Chapter 15: Evolutionary Approaches to Human Psychology
Gillian R. Brown and Catharine P. Cross
Chapter 16: Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive Effects of Domestication
Ruth C. Newberry
Part IV: Genes, Hormones, and Ontogeny
Chapter 17: From Instinct to Behavior Systems: An Integrated Approach to
Ethological Psychology
Gordon M. Burghardt and Robert Ian Bowers
Chapter 18: The Rise of Behavioral Genetics and the Transition to
Behavioral Genomics and Beyond
Oliver Krüger, Peter Korsten, and Joseph I. Hoffman
Chapter 19: Behavioral Endocrinology and Development
Elizabeth Adkins-Regan
Chapter 20: Cognitive Development in Comparative Perspective: Exploring the
Role of Language Acquisition in Spatial, Quantitative, and Memory
Development
Nora S. Newcombe
Chapter 21: Filial Attachment: Development, Mechanisms, and Consequences
Michael B. Hennessy and Harry N. Shair
Chapter 22: Epigenetic Mechanisms Shaping the Brain: Implications for
Psychological Science
Anthony P. Auger and Catherine J. Auger
Part V: Neural Substrate
Chapter 23: Instinctual Foundations of Animal Minds: Comparative
Perspectives on the Evolved Affective Neural Substrate of Emotions and
Learned Behaviors
Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 24: Comparative Vertebrate Nervous Systems
Andrew N. Iwaniuk and Douglas R. Wylie
Chapter 25: Parallel Processing of Spatial and Temporal Information in
Rodents and Humans: Role of the Hippocampus
Raymond Kesner
Chapter 26: The Biopsychology of Birdsong: Birdsong as a Biological Model
for Human Language
Kazuo Okanoya
Chapter 27: Laterality at the Neural, Cognitive, and Behavioral Levels
Giorgio Vallortigara and Elisabetta Versace
Chapter 28: Neural Networks, Learning, and Intelligence
Bruce J. MacLennan
Chapter 29: Biological Rhythms
Benjamin L. Smarr and Lance J. Kriegsfeld
Part VI: Behavior
Chapter 30: Information, Communication, and Language
Michael D. Beecher
Chapter 31: Referential Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Klaus Zuberbühler and Christof Neumann
Chapter 32: Symbolic Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 33: Interspecific Communication
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 34: Play and Exploration
Sergio M. Pellis and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 35: Maternal Behavior
Phyllis C. Lee
Chapter 36: Paternal and Alloparental Care
Charles T. Snowdon
Chapter 37: Courtship and Mate Choice
Michael J. Ryan and Lyndon A. Jordan
Chapter 38: Ingestive Behavior
Kurt Schwenk
Chapter 39: Predator–Prey Interactions: Integrating Fear Effects
Liana Y. Zanette and Michael Clinchy
Chapter 40: Antipredator Behavior
Akira Mori and Ryo Ito
Chapter 41: Why Animals Fight: Uncovering the Function and Mechanisms of
Territorial Aggression
Matthew J. Fuxjager, Xin Zhao, Nathan S. Rieger, and Catherine A. Marler
Chapter 42: Conflict Resolution
Teresa Romero and Filippo Aureli
Chapter 43: Friendships, Coalitions, and Alliances
Marina Cords and Nicole A. Thompson
Chapter 44: Comparative Studies of Cooperation: Collaboration and Prosocial
Behavior in Animals
Katherine A. Cronin
Chapter 45: Thermoregulation, Energetics, and Behavior
Christopher Harshaw, Mark S. Blumberg, and Jeffrey R. Alberts
Index
Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Editorial Board
Contributors
Part I: Perception, Attention, and Memory
Chapter 1: Animal Psychophysics: The Study of Sensation in Nonverbal
Organisms
John Malone
Chapter 2: Hearing and Communication
Georg M. Klump
Chapter 3: Comparative Visual Perception: An Overview
Olga F. Lazareva
Chapter 4: Chemoreception
Alicia Mathis and Adam L. Crane
Chapter 5: Perceptual and Functional Categorization in Animals
Ulrike Aust
Chapter 6: Object and Picture Perception
Shigeru Watanabe and Ulrike Aust
Chapter 7: Face Perception and Processing in Nonhuman Primates
Ikuma Adachi and Masaki Tomonaga
Chapter 8: Comparative Visual Illusions: Evolutionary, Cross-Cultural, and
Developmental Perspectives
Kazuo Fujita, Noriyuki Nakamura, Sota Watanabe, and Tomokazu Ushitani
Chapter 9: Selective and Divided Attention in Comparative Psychology
Walter T. Herbranson
Chapter 10: The Comparative Study of Working Memory
William A. Roberts and Angelo Santi
Chapter 11: Episodic-Like Memory and Mental Time Travel in Animals
Nicola S. Clayton
Part II: Learning and Motivation
Chapter 12: Ethological and Evolutionary Perspectives on Pavlovian
Conditioning
Mark A. Krause and Michael Domjan
Chapter 13: Comparative Learning and Evolution
Mauricio R. Papini and Carmen Torres
Chapter 14: On the Structure and Role of Optimality Models in the Study of
Behavior
Marco Vasconcelos, Inês Fortes, and Alex Kacelnik
Chapter 15: Decision Making: Rational and Irrational Choice
Thomas Zentall
Chapter 16: Decision Making Under Uncertainty: Preferences, Biases, and
Choice
Alexandra G. Rosati
Chapter 17: Relational Thinking in Animals and Humans: From Percepts to
Concepts
Ed Wasserman, Leyre Castro, and Joël Fagot
Chapter 18: Serial Learning
Greg Jensen
Chapter 19: The Comparative Psychology of Social Learning
Bennett G. Galef and Andrew Whiten
Chapter 20: Animal Social Learning, Culture, and Tradition
Kevin Laland and Cara Evans
Part III: Cognition and Emotion
Chapter 21: Spatial Cognition
Ken Cheng and Kate Jeffery
Chapter 22: Homing and Navigation
David J. Pritchard and Susan D. Healy
Chapter 23: Timing in Animals: From the Natural Environment to the
Laboratory, From Data to Models
Marco Vasconcelos, Marilia Pinheiro de Carvalho, and Armando Machado
Chapter 24: Intertemporal Choice and Delayed Gratification
Jeffrey R. Stevens
Chapter 25: Quantitative Cognition
Michael J. Beran
Chapter 26: Comparative Metaphysics: Thinking About Objects in Space and
Time
Trix Cacchione and Hannes Rakoczy
Chapter 27: Problem Solving
Amanda Seed and Carolina Mayer
Chapter 28: Animal Creativity and Innovation
Stan A. Kuczaj
Chapter 29: Causal and Inferential Reasoning in Animals
Christoph J. Völter and Josep Call
Chapter 30: Cognitive Insights From Tool Use in Nonhuman Animals
Elisabetta Visalberghi, Gloria Sabbatini, Alex H. Taylor, and Gavin R. Hunt
Chapter 31: The Comparative Psychology of Metacognition
Alexandria C. Zakrzewski, Jennifer M. Johnson, and J. David Smith
Chapter 32: Mind Reading in Animals?
Juliane Kaminski
Chapter 33: Reflecting on Mirror Self-Recognition: A Comparative View
Diana Reiss and Rachel Morrison
Chapter 34: Empathy Through the Ages: A Comparative Perspective on Rodent
Models of Shared Emotion
Jules B. Panksepp and Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 35: Animal Welfare Science
Michael Mendl, Georgia J. Mason, and Elizabeth S. Paul
Index
Volume 1: Basic Concepts, Methods, Neural Substrate, and Behavior
Editorial Board
About the Editor-in-Chief
Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction
Part I: History and Basic Concepts
Chapter 1: What Is Comparative Psychology?
Josep Call, Gordon M. Burghardt, Irene M. Pepperberg, Charles T. Snowdon,
and Thomas R. Zentall
Chapter 2: Trends and Themes in the History of Comparative Psychology
Donald A. Dewsbury
Part II: Methods
Chapter 3: Studying Animal Behavior: Integration of Field and Laboratory
Approaches
Charles T. Snowdon and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 4: Observational and Experimental Methods in Comparative Psychology
Ken Yasukawa and Kristin E. Bonnie
Chapter 5: Collecting Biologically Relevant Information: DNA to Population
Density
Tobias Deschner, Mimi Arandjelovic, and Hjalmar S. Kühl
Chapter 6: Tools for Measuring Animal Cognition: T Mazes to Touchscreens
David A. Washburn, J. Antonio Salamanca, Rachel C. Callery, and William
Whitham
Chapter 7: Neurons to Networks: Integrative Methods for Studying Social
Behavior
Eileen A. Lacey and Nancy G. Solomon
Chapter 8: From Nonparametric Tests to Mixed Models: A Brief Overview of
Statistical Tools Frequently Used in Comparative Psychology
Roger Mundry
Chapter 9: Methods and Applications of Animal Personality Research
Alexander Weiss and Drew M. Altschul
Chapter 10: Phylogenetic Approaches for Research in Comparative Cognition
Evan L. MacLean and Charles L. Nunn
Part III: Adaptation, Evolution, and Phylogeny
Chapter 11: Behavioral Variation, Adaptation, and Evolution
Delia S. Shelton and Emília P. Martins
Chapter 12: Evolution of Learning and Cognition
Nathan J. Emery
Chapter 13: Evolution and Consequences of Sociality
Judith Maria Burkart
Chapter 14: The Evolution of Language
Michael C. Corballis
Chapter 15: Evolutionary Approaches to Human Psychology
Gillian R. Brown and Catharine P. Cross
Chapter 16: Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive Effects of Domestication
Ruth C. Newberry
Part IV: Genes, Hormones, and Ontogeny
Chapter 17: From Instinct to Behavior Systems: An Integrated Approach to
Ethological Psychology
Gordon M. Burghardt and Robert Ian Bowers
Chapter 18: The Rise of Behavioral Genetics and the Transition to
Behavioral Genomics and Beyond
Oliver Krüger, Peter Korsten, and Joseph I. Hoffman
Chapter 19: Behavioral Endocrinology and Development
Elizabeth Adkins-Regan
Chapter 20: Cognitive Development in Comparative Perspective: Exploring the
Role of Language Acquisition in Spatial, Quantitative, and Memory
Development
Nora S. Newcombe
Chapter 21: Filial Attachment: Development, Mechanisms, and Consequences
Michael B. Hennessy and Harry N. Shair
Chapter 22: Epigenetic Mechanisms Shaping the Brain: Implications for
Psychological Science
Anthony P. Auger and Catherine J. Auger
Part V: Neural Substrate
Chapter 23: Instinctual Foundations of Animal Minds: Comparative
Perspectives on the Evolved Affective Neural Substrate of Emotions and
Learned Behaviors
Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 24: Comparative Vertebrate Nervous Systems
Andrew N. Iwaniuk and Douglas R. Wylie
Chapter 25: Parallel Processing of Spatial and Temporal Information in
Rodents and Humans: Role of the Hippocampus
Raymond Kesner
Chapter 26: The Biopsychology of Birdsong: Birdsong as a Biological Model
for Human Language
Kazuo Okanoya
Chapter 27: Laterality at the Neural, Cognitive, and Behavioral Levels
Giorgio Vallortigara and Elisabetta Versace
Chapter 28: Neural Networks, Learning, and Intelligence
Bruce J. MacLennan
Chapter 29: Biological Rhythms
Benjamin L. Smarr and Lance J. Kriegsfeld
Part VI: Behavior
Chapter 30: Information, Communication, and Language
Michael D. Beecher
Chapter 31: Referential Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Klaus Zuberbühler and Christof Neumann
Chapter 32: Symbolic Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 33: Interspecific Communication
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 34: Play and Exploration
Sergio M. Pellis and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 35: Maternal Behavior
Phyllis C. Lee
Chapter 36: Paternal and Alloparental Care
Charles T. Snowdon
Chapter 37: Courtship and Mate Choice
Michael J. Ryan and Lyndon A. Jordan
Chapter 38: Ingestive Behavior
Kurt Schwenk
Chapter 39: Predator–Prey Interactions: Integrating Fear Effects
Liana Y. Zanette and Michael Clinchy
Chapter 40: Antipredator Behavior
Akira Mori and Ryo Ito
Chapter 41: Why Animals Fight: Uncovering the Function and Mechanisms of
Territorial Aggression
Matthew J. Fuxjager, Xin Zhao, Nathan S. Rieger, and Catherine A. Marler
Chapter 42: Conflict Resolution
Teresa Romero and Filippo Aureli
Chapter 43: Friendships, Coalitions, and Alliances
Marina Cords and Nicole A. Thompson
Chapter 44: Comparative Studies of Cooperation: Collaboration and Prosocial
Behavior in Animals
Katherine A. Cronin
Chapter 45: Thermoregulation, Energetics, and Behavior
Christopher Harshaw, Mark S. Blumberg, and Jeffrey R. Alberts
Index
Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Editorial Board
Contributors
Part I: Perception, Attention, and Memory
Chapter 1: Animal Psychophysics: The Study of Sensation in Nonverbal
Organisms
John Malone
Chapter 2: Hearing and Communication
Georg M. Klump
Chapter 3: Comparative Visual Perception: An Overview
Olga F. Lazareva
Chapter 4: Chemoreception
Alicia Mathis and Adam L. Crane
Chapter 5: Perceptual and Functional Categorization in Animals
Ulrike Aust
Chapter 6: Object and Picture Perception
Shigeru Watanabe and Ulrike Aust
Chapter 7: Face Perception and Processing in Nonhuman Primates
Ikuma Adachi and Masaki Tomonaga
Chapter 8: Comparative Visual Illusions: Evolutionary, Cross-Cultural, and
Developmental Perspectives
Kazuo Fujita, Noriyuki Nakamura, Sota Watanabe, and Tomokazu Ushitani
Chapter 9: Selective and Divided Attention in Comparative Psychology
Walter T. Herbranson
Chapter 10: The Comparative Study of Working Memory
William A. Roberts and Angelo Santi
Chapter 11: Episodic-Like Memory and Mental Time Travel in Animals
Nicola S. Clayton
Part II: Learning and Motivation
Chapter 12: Ethological and Evolutionary Perspectives on Pavlovian
Conditioning
Mark A. Krause and Michael Domjan
Chapter 13: Comparative Learning and Evolution
Mauricio R. Papini and Carmen Torres
Chapter 14: On the Structure and Role of Optimality Models in the Study of
Behavior
Marco Vasconcelos, Inês Fortes, and Alex Kacelnik
Chapter 15: Decision Making: Rational and Irrational Choice
Thomas Zentall
Chapter 16: Decision Making Under Uncertainty: Preferences, Biases, and
Choice
Alexandra G. Rosati
Chapter 17: Relational Thinking in Animals and Humans: From Percepts to
Concepts
Ed Wasserman, Leyre Castro, and Joël Fagot
Chapter 18: Serial Learning
Greg Jensen
Chapter 19: The Comparative Psychology of Social Learning
Bennett G. Galef and Andrew Whiten
Chapter 20: Animal Social Learning, Culture, and Tradition
Kevin Laland and Cara Evans
Part III: Cognition and Emotion
Chapter 21: Spatial Cognition
Ken Cheng and Kate Jeffery
Chapter 22: Homing and Navigation
David J. Pritchard and Susan D. Healy
Chapter 23: Timing in Animals: From the Natural Environment to the
Laboratory, From Data to Models
Marco Vasconcelos, Marilia Pinheiro de Carvalho, and Armando Machado
Chapter 24: Intertemporal Choice and Delayed Gratification
Jeffrey R. Stevens
Chapter 25: Quantitative Cognition
Michael J. Beran
Chapter 26: Comparative Metaphysics: Thinking About Objects in Space and
Time
Trix Cacchione and Hannes Rakoczy
Chapter 27: Problem Solving
Amanda Seed and Carolina Mayer
Chapter 28: Animal Creativity and Innovation
Stan A. Kuczaj
Chapter 29: Causal and Inferential Reasoning in Animals
Christoph J. Völter and Josep Call
Chapter 30: Cognitive Insights From Tool Use in Nonhuman Animals
Elisabetta Visalberghi, Gloria Sabbatini, Alex H. Taylor, and Gavin R. Hunt
Chapter 31: The Comparative Psychology of Metacognition
Alexandria C. Zakrzewski, Jennifer M. Johnson, and J. David Smith
Chapter 32: Mind Reading in Animals?
Juliane Kaminski
Chapter 33: Reflecting on Mirror Self-Recognition: A Comparative View
Diana Reiss and Rachel Morrison
Chapter 34: Empathy Through the Ages: A Comparative Perspective on Rodent
Models of Shared Emotion
Jules B. Panksepp and Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 35: Animal Welfare Science
Michael Mendl, Georgia J. Mason, and Elizabeth S. Paul
Index
Editorial Board
About the Editor-in-Chief
Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction
Part I: History and Basic Concepts
Chapter 1: What Is Comparative Psychology?
Josep Call, Gordon M. Burghardt, Irene M. Pepperberg, Charles T. Snowdon,
and Thomas R. Zentall
Chapter 2: Trends and Themes in the History of Comparative Psychology
Donald A. Dewsbury
Part II: Methods
Chapter 3: Studying Animal Behavior: Integration of Field and Laboratory
Approaches
Charles T. Snowdon and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 4: Observational and Experimental Methods in Comparative Psychology
Ken Yasukawa and Kristin E. Bonnie
Chapter 5: Collecting Biologically Relevant Information: DNA to Population
Density
Tobias Deschner, Mimi Arandjelovic, and Hjalmar S. Kühl
Chapter 6: Tools for Measuring Animal Cognition: T Mazes to Touchscreens
David A. Washburn, J. Antonio Salamanca, Rachel C. Callery, and William
Whitham
Chapter 7: Neurons to Networks: Integrative Methods for Studying Social
Behavior
Eileen A. Lacey and Nancy G. Solomon
Chapter 8: From Nonparametric Tests to Mixed Models: A Brief Overview of
Statistical Tools Frequently Used in Comparative Psychology
Roger Mundry
Chapter 9: Methods and Applications of Animal Personality Research
Alexander Weiss and Drew M. Altschul
Chapter 10: Phylogenetic Approaches for Research in Comparative Cognition
Evan L. MacLean and Charles L. Nunn
Part III: Adaptation, Evolution, and Phylogeny
Chapter 11: Behavioral Variation, Adaptation, and Evolution
Delia S. Shelton and Emília P. Martins
Chapter 12: Evolution of Learning and Cognition
Nathan J. Emery
Chapter 13: Evolution and Consequences of Sociality
Judith Maria Burkart
Chapter 14: The Evolution of Language
Michael C. Corballis
Chapter 15: Evolutionary Approaches to Human Psychology
Gillian R. Brown and Catharine P. Cross
Chapter 16: Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive Effects of Domestication
Ruth C. Newberry
Part IV: Genes, Hormones, and Ontogeny
Chapter 17: From Instinct to Behavior Systems: An Integrated Approach to
Ethological Psychology
Gordon M. Burghardt and Robert Ian Bowers
Chapter 18: The Rise of Behavioral Genetics and the Transition to
Behavioral Genomics and Beyond
Oliver Krüger, Peter Korsten, and Joseph I. Hoffman
Chapter 19: Behavioral Endocrinology and Development
Elizabeth Adkins-Regan
Chapter 20: Cognitive Development in Comparative Perspective: Exploring the
Role of Language Acquisition in Spatial, Quantitative, and Memory
Development
Nora S. Newcombe
Chapter 21: Filial Attachment: Development, Mechanisms, and Consequences
Michael B. Hennessy and Harry N. Shair
Chapter 22: Epigenetic Mechanisms Shaping the Brain: Implications for
Psychological Science
Anthony P. Auger and Catherine J. Auger
Part V: Neural Substrate
Chapter 23: Instinctual Foundations of Animal Minds: Comparative
Perspectives on the Evolved Affective Neural Substrate of Emotions and
Learned Behaviors
Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 24: Comparative Vertebrate Nervous Systems
Andrew N. Iwaniuk and Douglas R. Wylie
Chapter 25: Parallel Processing of Spatial and Temporal Information in
Rodents and Humans: Role of the Hippocampus
Raymond Kesner
Chapter 26: The Biopsychology of Birdsong: Birdsong as a Biological Model
for Human Language
Kazuo Okanoya
Chapter 27: Laterality at the Neural, Cognitive, and Behavioral Levels
Giorgio Vallortigara and Elisabetta Versace
Chapter 28: Neural Networks, Learning, and Intelligence
Bruce J. MacLennan
Chapter 29: Biological Rhythms
Benjamin L. Smarr and Lance J. Kriegsfeld
Part VI: Behavior
Chapter 30: Information, Communication, and Language
Michael D. Beecher
Chapter 31: Referential Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Klaus Zuberbühler and Christof Neumann
Chapter 32: Symbolic Communication in Nonhuman Animals
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 33: Interspecific Communication
Irene M. Pepperberg
Chapter 34: Play and Exploration
Sergio M. Pellis and Gordon M. Burghardt
Chapter 35: Maternal Behavior
Phyllis C. Lee
Chapter 36: Paternal and Alloparental Care
Charles T. Snowdon
Chapter 37: Courtship and Mate Choice
Michael J. Ryan and Lyndon A. Jordan
Chapter 38: Ingestive Behavior
Kurt Schwenk
Chapter 39: Predator–Prey Interactions: Integrating Fear Effects
Liana Y. Zanette and Michael Clinchy
Chapter 40: Antipredator Behavior
Akira Mori and Ryo Ito
Chapter 41: Why Animals Fight: Uncovering the Function and Mechanisms of
Territorial Aggression
Matthew J. Fuxjager, Xin Zhao, Nathan S. Rieger, and Catherine A. Marler
Chapter 42: Conflict Resolution
Teresa Romero and Filippo Aureli
Chapter 43: Friendships, Coalitions, and Alliances
Marina Cords and Nicole A. Thompson
Chapter 44: Comparative Studies of Cooperation: Collaboration and Prosocial
Behavior in Animals
Katherine A. Cronin
Chapter 45: Thermoregulation, Energetics, and Behavior
Christopher Harshaw, Mark S. Blumberg, and Jeffrey R. Alberts
Index
Volume 2: Perception, Learning, and Cognition
Editorial Board
Contributors
Part I: Perception, Attention, and Memory
Chapter 1: Animal Psychophysics: The Study of Sensation in Nonverbal
Organisms
John Malone
Chapter 2: Hearing and Communication
Georg M. Klump
Chapter 3: Comparative Visual Perception: An Overview
Olga F. Lazareva
Chapter 4: Chemoreception
Alicia Mathis and Adam L. Crane
Chapter 5: Perceptual and Functional Categorization in Animals
Ulrike Aust
Chapter 6: Object and Picture Perception
Shigeru Watanabe and Ulrike Aust
Chapter 7: Face Perception and Processing in Nonhuman Primates
Ikuma Adachi and Masaki Tomonaga
Chapter 8: Comparative Visual Illusions: Evolutionary, Cross-Cultural, and
Developmental Perspectives
Kazuo Fujita, Noriyuki Nakamura, Sota Watanabe, and Tomokazu Ushitani
Chapter 9: Selective and Divided Attention in Comparative Psychology
Walter T. Herbranson
Chapter 10: The Comparative Study of Working Memory
William A. Roberts and Angelo Santi
Chapter 11: Episodic-Like Memory and Mental Time Travel in Animals
Nicola S. Clayton
Part II: Learning and Motivation
Chapter 12: Ethological and Evolutionary Perspectives on Pavlovian
Conditioning
Mark A. Krause and Michael Domjan
Chapter 13: Comparative Learning and Evolution
Mauricio R. Papini and Carmen Torres
Chapter 14: On the Structure and Role of Optimality Models in the Study of
Behavior
Marco Vasconcelos, Inês Fortes, and Alex Kacelnik
Chapter 15: Decision Making: Rational and Irrational Choice
Thomas Zentall
Chapter 16: Decision Making Under Uncertainty: Preferences, Biases, and
Choice
Alexandra G. Rosati
Chapter 17: Relational Thinking in Animals and Humans: From Percepts to
Concepts
Ed Wasserman, Leyre Castro, and Joël Fagot
Chapter 18: Serial Learning
Greg Jensen
Chapter 19: The Comparative Psychology of Social Learning
Bennett G. Galef and Andrew Whiten
Chapter 20: Animal Social Learning, Culture, and Tradition
Kevin Laland and Cara Evans
Part III: Cognition and Emotion
Chapter 21: Spatial Cognition
Ken Cheng and Kate Jeffery
Chapter 22: Homing and Navigation
David J. Pritchard and Susan D. Healy
Chapter 23: Timing in Animals: From the Natural Environment to the
Laboratory, From Data to Models
Marco Vasconcelos, Marilia Pinheiro de Carvalho, and Armando Machado
Chapter 24: Intertemporal Choice and Delayed Gratification
Jeffrey R. Stevens
Chapter 25: Quantitative Cognition
Michael J. Beran
Chapter 26: Comparative Metaphysics: Thinking About Objects in Space and
Time
Trix Cacchione and Hannes Rakoczy
Chapter 27: Problem Solving
Amanda Seed and Carolina Mayer
Chapter 28: Animal Creativity and Innovation
Stan A. Kuczaj
Chapter 29: Causal and Inferential Reasoning in Animals
Christoph J. Völter and Josep Call
Chapter 30: Cognitive Insights From Tool Use in Nonhuman Animals
Elisabetta Visalberghi, Gloria Sabbatini, Alex H. Taylor, and Gavin R. Hunt
Chapter 31: The Comparative Psychology of Metacognition
Alexandria C. Zakrzewski, Jennifer M. Johnson, and J. David Smith
Chapter 32: Mind Reading in Animals?
Juliane Kaminski
Chapter 33: Reflecting on Mirror Self-Recognition: A Comparative View
Diana Reiss and Rachel Morrison
Chapter 34: Empathy Through the Ages: A Comparative Perspective on Rodent
Models of Shared Emotion
Jules B. Panksepp and Jaak Panksepp
Chapter 35: Animal Welfare Science
Michael Mendl, Georgia J. Mason, and Elizabeth S. Paul
Index