Title: Behavior
1Behavior
- Ethology Study of behavior
2Outline
- Behavior is what an animal does and how it does
it - Behaviors have both ultimate and proximate causes
- Certain stimuli trigger innate behaviors called
fixed action patterns - Learning is experience based modification of
behavior - Rhythmic behaviors sync. Activities with temporal
changes in the environment - Environmental cues guide movement
- Sociobiology places social behavior in an
evolutionary context - Competitive social behaviors often represent
contests for resources - Mating behavior relates directly to an animals
fitness - Communication
- Inclusive fitness can account for most altruistic
behavior
3Babies make noise when no one is around
- Trying to fit their vocalizations to internal
templates? - Eventually turn into complex sounds
- Communication is the result of genetic cues
modified during development by environmental
factors - Bird song works like this too
4Bird songs vs. calls
- Long vs. Short, arbitrary distinction
- Crows have more than 20 different calls
- Ludwig van Beethoven, for example, included
imitations of the Nightingale, Quail and Cuckoo
in his Symphony No. 6 (the Pastoral). - Pink Floyd's 1969 albums More and Ummagumma
5Behavior what an animal does and how it does it
- Study of animal behavior is as old as we are.
- Need it to hunt
- Cave art a study of behavior?
- Domestication control of behavior
6Early 1900s Ethology becomes formal discipline
- Due to work of 3 ethologists
- K. Lorenz studied waterfowl and other organisms
- N. Tinbergen studied gulls and other organisms
- K. Von Frisch studied communication in bees
7Nothing in biology makes sense except in the
light of evolution
- Natural selection is going on so animals have to
maximize their fitness - Recall fitness doesnt exactly mean the strongest
- How we feed
- What mate we choose
8Genetic component of behavior
- If genes werent involved behavior wouldnt be
subject to natural selection and wouldnt change
over time - Genes set up the neural network that lets us
learn. - Behavioral ecology animals increase fitness by
optimal behavior - Best explanation for the data
9Studying genetic components of behavior
- Can study twins If Jacob is smart is Mack also?
- Can study adoptees. If your real parents were
alcoholics but your adopted parents are
teetotalers what will you be? - Some example studies
- Novelty seeking personality, ear wiggling,
perfect pitch - propensity for smoking,Alcoholism, homosexuality
- http//www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome
/elsi/behavior.shtml3
Not really twins, but hey.
10- Lovebirds show innate behavior modified by
experience
11Behaviors have both ultimate and proximate causes
- Ultimate cause Why did this happen?
- Ultimate causation - historical explanations
- Explains why a behavior evolved
- Study by measuring influence on survival or
reproduction
12- Proximate cause How did this happen?
- Proximate causation - immediate causes
- Explains how behavior works - what stimulates
behavior to occur - Study by measuring or describing the stimuli that
elicit behavior - Internal - physiological events (hormones,
nervous system) - External - environmental stimuli
13Example - bird migration
Proximate causes External stimuli- changes in
daylength Internal stimuli - hormone levels
- Ultimate causes - birds that migrate have a
selective advantage over birds that don't/didn't,
selected for over time, could be due to long term
climate changes, glaciation, disease, taking
advantage of food sources, etc.
14Components of Behavior
- 2 Components
- Nature/innate instinct and genes determine
behavior - Nurture/learned experience and learning
influence behavior - Two extremes are not mutually exclusive, but work
together to influence behavior
15Examples of innate behavior
- egg ejection by cuckoos (brood parasites)
- freezing behavior of nestling birds when exposed
to silhouettes (raptors versus waterfowl)
16Components of Innate Behavior
- Components of Innate Behavior
- FAP - fixed action pattern, all or none response
- Once started most animals will finish activity
even if new stimuli show the activity to be
inappropriate - Sign stimulus - causes release of FAP
- Usually obvious aspect of morphology
17Sticklebacks attack red
18Were sensitive to some stimuli more so than
others
- Frogs are sensitive to movement of prey
- Will starve if surrounded by dead/unmoving flies
- Supernormal stimulus artificial stimuli that
elicit a stronger response - Oystercatchers will rather incubate a giant model
of an egg instead of the real thing
19Learned behavior
- Learning modification of behavior in response to
specific experiences
20Learning vs. Maturation
- Doing something faster doesnt mean youve
learned - Experiment they kept baby birds from flapping
their wings until they should be old enough to
fly and they flew normally and immeadiately.
21Learning Habituation
- Loss of responsiveness to unimportant stimuli or
stimuli that dont provide appropriate feedback. - Banner blindness in web design
22Imprinting
- Lorenzs study
- Chuck Jones study
- Salmon spawn back to stream of their birth from
ocean - Olfactory imprinting
- Critical period happens to young and adults
23Conservation issues
- minimize/eliminate human presence while raising
California Condors
24Classical conditioning
- Associative learning one stimulus goes with
another, the roar goes with the lion - Pavlov married the concepts of feeding and the
sound of a bell in his dogs mind - Alpert Watson conditioned an 11 month old orphan
named Alpert to fear rats - California Sea Slug ? has 20,000 neurons but can
be habituated, and sensitized - Methods useful for dealing with phobias
25Learned helplessness
- Results from inescapable punishment
- continued failure may inhibit somebody from
experiencing agency - Experiment A dog had earlier been repeatedly
conditioned to associate a sound with electric
shocks didnt try (later in another setting) to
escape the electric shocks after that sound and a
flash of light was presented, even though all the
dog would have had to do is jump over a low
divider. The dog didn't even try to avoid the
"aversive stimulus" the dog had previously
"learned" that nothing it did mattered.
26Learned helplessness
- people doing mental tasks in the presence of
noise. - Given a switch that would turn off the noise,
performance improved, even though subject rarely
bothered to turn off the noise. - being aware of the ability to have control was
enough to substantially counteract its
distracting effect.
27Evidence of optimism?
- Not all of the dogs became helpless.
- About 1/3 of the 150 dogs tried to find ways out
of unpleasant experiences even if they previously
had no control.
Im an optimistic Steeler Fan
28Operant conditioning
- Trial and error learning
- B.F. Skinners Skinner Box rat in box with
lever. Push the lever food comes out. It
learns to push the lever. - Acetycholine is released through cerebral cortex
as we try things - In nature good / bad tastes
- Remember genes tell us what will taste good and
bad, we learn from there
29Observational Learning
- watch me
- Banduras Bobo doll experiment kids who watched
adults beat up doll also beat up doll.
- Kid watched Beavis start a fire
- Started fire
- Cartoon makers are now careful to not create
copyable behavior.
30Play
- Activity with no goal, but is similar to
goal-directed behavior. - Risky behavior
- practice hypothesis play learning
- But do they really get better?
- exercise hypothesis
- Fat babies arent going to bring home the bacon
31Insight Learning
- Getting it right the first time with no prior
experience - Corvidae Crows, ravens, Jays can do similar
32Animal Cognition
- Cognition Ability to be aware and make judgments
about your environment. - Are nonhuman animals cognitive?
- Conscious?
- Do they feel pain?
- Are they humiliated when we dress them up?
- Are animals just computer programs?
- They cant think to the ability we can
- Is this a question of degrees?
33Cognitive ethology
- In Donald Griffins Question of Animal Awareness,
he argued that animals have conscious minds like
those of humans. - Jane Goodall (distantly related to Mr. Chessman)
studied chimps, saw them fake injuries to get
attention. - Lying thinking about reality and others
perceptions of it
34- Jay Gould of Harvard reported bees forming
mental maps of foraging areas - Most people who spend time with animals feel that
they can think. - Implications about how you view mankinds
position in the world.
35Rhythms
- Why do you sleep when you do? How does your body
know to wake up? - External or internal cues?
- Can you tell yourself to wake up in 4 hours and
do so? - In controlled environments all light, all dark,
or twilight Humans have an internal clock of
around 25 hours - What about long term things? If you kept animals
in controlled environments for years would they
mate at the same time as animals in the wild?
36Sleep
- No doc. Cases of humans dying directly from lack
of sleep. - Maybe from sleep deprived caused accidents
- Studies of people awake for 10 days shows
temporary decreases in cog. functions, but
nothing long term - Microsleep
- Can lead to our ability to metabolize glucose ?
cause of diabetes - Rats kept alive for 28 days die.
Bags under eyes Inheritable Etiologies bone
structure, pigments, eye ailments, nutrition,
pregnancy, dehydration, circulation
37Fatal Familial Insomnia
- 28 families have it
- Late onset Autosomal dominant 50/50 chance of
inheritance - Mutates a protein into a prion
- Causes plaques on thalmus sleep responsible
region - Progression over 2 years increasing insomnia,
odd phobias, panic attacks, hallucinations,
panic, agitation and sweating, dementia, total
insomnia and sudden death after becoming mute.
38Movement from external cues
- Kinesis change in activity rate in response to
stim. - Cold blooded animals
- Taxis automatic movement towards or away from
stim. - Trout orient so they face upstream
- Geotaxis King crab larvae orient down toward the
earth
39Migration
- How do gold plovers go 13,000 km from arctic to
S. America? - How do birds find Hawaii every year?
- Pilot from landmark to landmark
- Orient yourself on a straight line for the trip.
- Navigation ? complex mental mapping
- Animals navigate like sailor from sun and stars
40- Indigo Bunting orients on North Star ?
- Can they sense the magnetic field?
- Magnetite a magnetic mineral is found in heads of
some birds, abdomens of some bees - Nothings been firmly established