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This text is the first to provide a coherent theoretical treatment of
the flourishing new field of developmental psychobiology which has
arisen in recent years on the crest of exciting advances in
evolutionary biology, developmental neuroscience, and dynamic systems
theory.
Michel and Moore, two of the field's key pioneers and researchers,
integrate primary source information from research in both biological
and psychological disciplines in a clear account of the frontier of
biopsychological investigation and theorizing.
Explicitly conceptual and historical, the first three chapters set the
stage for a clear understanding of the field and its research, with
particular attention to the nature-nurture question. The next three
chapters each provide information about a basic subfield in biology
(genetics, evolution, embryology) that is particularly relevant for
developmental studies of behavior. These are followed by extended
treatments of three spheres of inquiry (behavioral embryology,
cognitive neuroscience, animal behavior) in terms of how a successful
interdisciplinary approach to behavioral development might look. A
final chapter comments on some of the unique aspects of development
study.
From this detailed and clearly organized text, students will achieve a
firm grasp of some of science's most fertile questions about the
relation between evolution and development, the relation between brain
and cognitive development, the value of a natural history approach to
animal behavior -- and what it teaches us about humans -- and much
more. Each chapter contains material that questions the conventional
wisdom held in many subdisciplines of biology and
psychology. Throughout, the text challenges students to think
creatively as it thoroughly grounds them in the field's approach to
such topics as behavioral-genetic analysis, the concept of innateness,
molecular genetics and development, neuroembryology, behavioral
embryology, maturation, cognition, and ethology.
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