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Dec 1999
ISBN 0262082772
711 pp.
145 illus.
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The Design of Animal Communication
Marc D. Hauser and Mark Konishi

When animals, including humans, communicate, they convey information and express their perceptions of the world. Because different organisms are able to produce and perceive different signals, the animal world contains a diversity of communication systems. Based on the approach laid out in the 1950s by Nobel laureate Nikolaas Tinbergen, this book looks at animal communication from the four perspectives of mechanisms, ontogeny, function, and phylogeny.

The book's great strength is its broad comparative perspective, which enables the reader to appreciate the diversity of solutions to particular problems of signal design and perception. For example, although the neural circuitry underlying the production of acoustic signals is different in frogs, songbirds, bats, and humans, each involves a set of dedicated pathways designed to solve particular problems of communicative efficiency. Such comparative findings form the basis of a conceptual framework for understanding the mechanisms underlying communication systems and their evolution.

Table of Contents
 Preface
I Mechanisms of Communication
1 Vocal Communication in Xenopus laevis
by Darcy B. Kelley and Martha L. Tobias
2 The Motor Basis of Vocal Performance in Songbirds
by Roderick A. Suthers
3 The Anatomy and Timing of Vocal Learning in Birds
by Fernando Nottebohm
4 The Dance Language of Honeybees: Recent Findings and Problems
by Axel Michelsen
5 Processing Species-specific Calls by Combination-sensitive Neurons in Echolocating Bat
by Jagmeet S. Kanwal
6 A Cellular Basis for Reading Minds from Faces and Actions
by David I. Perrett
7 Neural Systems for Recognizing Emotions in Humans
by Ralph Adolphs
8 The Neuroendocrine Basis of Seasonal Changes in Vocal Behavior among Songbirds
by Gregory F. Ball
9 Testosterone, Aggression, and Communication: Ecological Bases of Endocrine Phenomena
by John C. Wingfield, Jerry D. Jacobs, Kiran Soma, Donna L. Maney, Kathleen Hunt, Deborah Wisti-Peterson, Simone Meddle, Marilyn Ramenofsky and Kimberly Sullivan
II Ontogeny of Communication
10 On Innateness: Are Sparrow Songs "Learned" or "Innate"?
by Peter Marler
11 Making Ecological Sense of Song Development by Songbirds
by Donald E. Kroodsma
12 Song- and Order-selective Auditory Responses Emerge in Neurons of the Songbird Anterior Forebrain during Vocal Learning
by Allison J. Doupe and Michele M. Solis
13 Genetics of Canary Song Learning: Innate Mechanisms and Other Neurobiological Considerations
by Paul C. Mundinger
14 Production, Usage, and Response in Nonhuman Primate Vocal Development
by Robert M. Seyfarth and Dorothy L. Cheney
15 Speech, Language, and the Brain: Innate Preparation for Learning
by Patricia K. Kuhl
III Evolution of Communication
16 Signal Evolution in Electric Communication
by Carl D. Hopkins
17 Complementary Explanations for Existing Phenotypes in an Acoustic Communication System
by Andrew H. Bass, Deana Bodnar and Margaret A. Marchaterre
18 Reproductive Character Displacement and Other Sources of Selection on Acoustic Communication Systems
by H. Carl Gerhardt
19 Phylogenetic Inference and the Evolution of Communication in Túngara Frogs
by Michael J. Ryan and A. Stanley Rand
20 Categorical Perception of Behaviorally Relevant Stimuli by Crickets
by Robert A. Wyttenbach and Ronald R. Hoy
21 Functions of Song Variation in Song Sparrows
by William A. Searcy and Stephen Nowicki
22 The Evolution of a Lopsided Brain: Asymmetries Underlying Facial and Vocal Expressions in Primates
by Marc D. Hauser
23 Mechanisms Underlying the Vocalizations of Nonhuman Primates
by Dorothy L. Cheney and Robert M. Seyfarth
24 Communication and Tool Use in Chimpanzees: Cultural and Social Contexts
by Tetsuro Matsuzawa
 List of Contributors
 Name Index
 Subject Index
 
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Biology
Psychology, Cognitive Science


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