Biology 484 – Ethology Portions of Chapters 4 & 5 – The Group Learning Experience “The Control & Organization of Behavior”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Guided Tour of the Brain
Advertisements

Organisms and Their Environments
Navigation Migration & Homing both involve timing (when to move) and navigation (direction)
MICHAEL MILFORD, DAVID PRASSER, AND GORDON WYETH FOLAMI ALAMUDUN GRADUATE STUDENT COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY RatSLAM on the Edge:
Grinnell College’s CO2 emissions (Chris Bair) Sustainability Town Hall 12 noon and 7:30 pm JRC 101.
Nerves and the brain. Nerve A nerve is a bundle of axons or neuronal fibres bound together like wires in a cable. Neurons or nerve cells are the functional.
$ recognition & localization of predators & prey $ feature analyzers in the brain $ from recognition to response $ summary PART 2: SENSORY WORLDS #09:
List animals that migrate. Definition A regular, seasonal movement from one area to another All classes of animals migrate.
Introduction to Psychology Suzy Scherf Lecture 8: How Do We Know? Sensation and Perception Early Memory.
Slideshow B12: Animal senses. Sense of touch: most sensitive nose – star-nosed mole.
Biology 272a: Comparative Animal Physiology Animal Navigation.
Chapter 4 Opener: Woodhouse’s toad. 4.1 A complex response to simple stimuli.
Habitat Selection.
Biology 484 – Ethology Chapter 4 – Neural Mechanisms Controlling Behavior.
The Control of Behavior: Neural Mechanisms Chapter 4.
SME Review - September 20, 2006 Neural Network Modeling Jean Carlson, Ted Brookings.
Why vocal communication is hard to study physiologically Categorical components Complex signals vary along multiple parameters For example, frequency,
Taking It All In: Sensation and Perception
Chapter 51 Reading Quiz 1.What an animal does and how it does it is known as ____. 2.From what 2 main sources is behavior derived? 3.The full set of food-obtaining.
The Cerebral Cortex Chapter 2, Lecture 5 “…the mind is what the brain does.” - David Myers.
Lesson Overview 28.1 Response
Chapter 50 Animal Behavior.
Physiology of auditory system References:  Guyton & Hall  Review of medical physiology (Ganong) Dr. Mohammadi.
Sensory systems basics. Sensing the external world.
How to Use This Presentation To View the presentation as a slideshow with effects select “View” on the menu bar and click on “Slide Show”, or simply press.
Chapter 14 Animals.
Animal Behavior. Behavior is the way an organism reacts to changes in its internal condition or external environment. A stimulus is any kind of signal.
 The newer neural networks are located in the cerebrum. The cerebrum is the two large hemispheres of the brain and is covered by the cerebral cortex.
Nervous System: Part VI Specialized Receptors: Eyes and Ears.
Control of Gene Expression
Behave Yourself! A Summary of Animal Behaviors
A new neural framework for visuospatial processing Group #4 Alicia Iafonaro Alyona Koneva Barbara Kim Isaac Del Rio.
Food & Habitat Selection
Chapter 4 ~ Responses to Living Things. Chapter 4 ~ Responses of Living Things *Decorate a cover page ~ Use color* *Next Page* Lesson 1 Vocabulary environment-
1 Approaches to the Study of Behavior __________can be defined as the way an organism responds to stimuli in its environment. Is behavior learned or genetic?
Behave Yourself! A Summary of Animal Behaviors. Do Now 1.What kind of animals have you seen migrating? 2.Why do you think they migrate at certain times.
Animal Behavior. Behavior Behavior is what an animal does and how it does it Behavior is a result of GENETIC and ENVIRONMENTAL factors (nature vs nurture)
Smell, Taste, TOUCH & Hearing
H exam I H motor strategies H mate calling in crickets H song production by  s H song recognition by  s H sender-receiver matching H summary PART 3:
Sensory Systems Lesson 14. Sensory Information n Detection of changes in environment l external or internal n 4 main functions l perception l control.
18 April 2007 IB 429: Animal Behavior Physiology of Behavior Prof. Fred Delcomyn Office:422A Morrill Hall Phone:
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Animal and Behavior Table of Contents Section 1 What Is an Animal?
Neural Mechanisms of Behavior
Essential Cell Biology
Evolution of the Vestibular and Auditory End Organs
Behave Yourself! – A Summary of Animal Behaviors J. R. Jones Spring 2006.
The Process of Forming Perceptions SHMD219. Perception The ability to see, hear, or become aware of something through the senses. Perception is a series.
A cerebral hemisphere is defined as one of the two regions of the brain that are delineated by the body's median plane.
Essential Cell Biology Third Edition Chapter 1 Introduction to Cells Copyright © Garland Science 2010.
10/8/20161 Seasonal Behaviors Part II, sec 2 10/8/20162 Winter Hardship Many places animals must deal with winter hardships little food bitter cold Frog.
Ecological Development: Biotic, Abiotic, and Symbiotic Regulation of Development (Chapter 18 9th Edition; Chapter 19 10th edition) Lange BIOL 370 – Developmental.
Senses Taylor Bailey Standard 4.L.5 – 4 th Grade.
Homing.  The ability to return over unfamiliar territory to its ‘home’ – usually on a regular basis.
PSY2301: Biological Foundations of Behavior The Auditory System Chapter 10.
Our Newer Brain “What makes us distinctively human mostly arises from the complex function of the cerebral cortex.” - David G. Myers.
Echolocation.
Chapter 3 Section 3 Animal Behavior.
Neural Control of Behavior
Option A.4 Innate & Learned Behavior
Option A.4 Innate & Learned Behavior
Neural Control of Behavior
Echolocation.
THE SENSE You may think that you hear sounds with your ear, smell with your nose, or taste with your tongue, but that is not true. Your sensory organs.
Behave Yourself! A Summary of Animal Behaviors
Kate Straub, Julia Boothroyd, Sam Nordstrom and Anna Winter
Sensory Systems Lecture 12.
Organisms and Their Environments
AP Psychology Sept. 28th Objective Opener
An Evolutionary View of Behavior
Presentation transcript:

Biology 484 – Ethology Portions of Chapters 4 & 5 – The Group Learning Experience “The Control & Organization of Behavior”

On February 19, 2009 we held a “group learning experience” in class where we worked in small groups to teach ourselves specific information in animal behavior from chapters 4 & 5. This exercise was conducted to give you the chance to model a very common approach to learning that is often used in professional and graduate schools in science. These are the slides that were worked on during this exercise. In another file (484 GLE.pdf), I have combined the notes written by each group and lightly edited the contents for clarity and accuracy. Together, these two documents should allow you to understand the material covered during this class period.

4.10 The eyestalks of a fiddler crab point straight up

4.11 Noctuid moth ears

4.12 Neurons and their operation

4.13 Neural network of a moth

4.14 Properties of the ultrasound-detecting auditory receptors of a noctuid moth (Part 1)

4.14 Properties of the ultrasound-detecting auditory receptors of a noctuid moth (Part 2)

4.15 How moths might locate bats in space (Part 1)

4.15 How moths might locate bats in space (Part 2)

4.15 How moths might locate bats in space (Part 3)

4.16 Bat ultrasonic cries trigger evasive behavior in a number of insects

4.17 Is the A2 cell necessary for anti-interception behavior by moths? (Part 1)

4.17 Is the A2 cell necessary for anti-interception behavior by moths? (Part 2)

4.18 Avoidance of and attraction to different sound frequencies by crickets (Part 1)

4.18 Avoidance of and attraction to different sound frequencies by crickets (Part 2)

4.20 Escape behavior by a sea slug

4.21 Neural control of escape behavior in Tritonia

4.27 The star-nosed mole’s nose differs greatly from those of its relatives

4.28 A special tactile apparatus (Part 1)

4.28 A special tactile apparatus (Part 2)

4.29 The cortical sensory map of the star-nosed mole (Part 1)

4.29 The cortical sensory map of the star-nosed mole (Part 2)

4.30 Sensory analysis in four insectivores

4.31 Sensory analysis in humans and naked mole-rats

4.32 Ultraviolet-reflecting patterns have great biological significance for some species

4.33 A bird that can sense ultraviolet light

4.34 The ultraviolet reflectance of the throat patch affects mate choice in the bluethroat

4.35 Relevant movements activate neurons in different parts of the superior temporal sulcus

4.37 Specialization of function in different parts of the visual cortex of humans

4.39 The hippocampus is essential for navigation by humans (Part 1)

4.39 The hippocampus is essential for navigation by humans (Part 2)

4.39 The hippocampus is essential for navigation by humans (Part 3)

4.40 The ability to navigate unfamiliar terrain requires a compass sense and map sense (Part 1)

4.40 The ability to navigate unfamiliar terrain requires a compass sense and map sense (Part 2)

4.41 Clock shifting and altered navigation in homing pigeons

4.42 The fall migration route of monarch butterflies takes some butterflies from Canada to Mexico

4.43 Manipulation of the biological clock changes the orientation of migrating monarchs

4.44 Polarized light affects the orientation of monarch butterflies