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The Design of Animal Communication

Part of the A Bradford book series
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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 undestanding the mechanisms underlying communication systems and their evolution.

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Product Details
Bradford Books
0262582236 / 9780262582230
Paperback / softback
591.59
24/01/2003
United States
English
713 p. : ill.
23 cm
further/higher education /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1999.