Behavioural and Morphological Asymmetries in Vertebrates

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A01=A. Wallace Deckel
A01=Yegor B. Malashichev
Acute Immobilization Stress
Amodal Completion
Asymmetry Formation
Asymmetry Profiles
Author_A. Wallace Deckel
Author_Yegor B. Malashichev
Behavioral Asymmetries
Behavioral Laterality
Brain Asymmetry
Brain Hemispheres
Brain Lateralization
Category=PS
Domestic Chick
Eagle Alarm Call
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Habenular Nuclei
Laevis Larvae
Lateralized Chicks
Left Brain Hemisphere
Mann Whitney U-test
Monocular Field
Morphological Asymmetries
Motor Asymmetries
Population Level Lateral
SEM
Subjective Contours
Thymus Lobes
TTX.
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781587061059
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Aug 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume grew out of the 2nd International Symposium on Behavioral and Morphological Asymmetries, which took place in St. Petersburg (Russia) in September 2004 at the St. Petersburg State University under the patronage of the St. Petersburg Society of Naturalists. The Symposium is the descendant of a satellite event with a similar name of the 4th World Congress of Herpetology (December, 2001, Bentota, Sri Lanka). While the 1st Symposium (see special issue number 3 for 2002 of the journal, Laterality) covered only asymmetries observed in amphibians and reptiles, the second one had a broader scope. Three years passed since the Sri Lanka meeting and there was sustained and increasing interest in vertebrate lateralization in the scientific community, especially in lower vertebrates, or at least, in nonmammalian models. This supported not only by the collection of talks at the Symposium, but also by current publications in international periodicals. Talks here were substantially biased towards the lower vertebrates and birds, while reptiles remained to be studied in more detail.

Two important rationales were considered for the Symposium and the volume, which you have in hand. The first was to bring together topics and specialists representing different branches of the relatively broad field of research of animal asymmetries. The contributions focused on three main subjects: (1) development of structural and functional asymmetries constituted; (2) evolution and adaptation; and (3) function. Aiming for a broader range of topics, the Symposium may still show the current perspective. The increasing number of contributors (twice as many as at the Sri Lanka meeting) give at least a hope that it was indeed so. We, however, further invited authors, who although not present at the meeting itself, nevertheless could contribute to the book to finalize its shape. The other purpose of this volume is to expose Western scientists to Eastern thoughts regarding laterality, and vice versa. We aimed also to help Russian scientists with limited resources and access to the international journals the chance to publish in the Western literature. It seemed to us that this is a fine and perfectly acceptable approach, which on the other hand explains some of the unevenness in the quality and the style of the different manuscripts.

Taken together, these fourteen Chapters, we believe, display a variety of the most interesting and intriguing topics within the broad field of animal lateralization, showing the perspectives of its developments. Far from complete, the volume nevertheless is a state-of-the-art book, which complements a bulk of recent literature on genetics and developmental studies of asymmetries of the heart and other inner organs, interhemispheric specialization in human subjects, and fluctuating morphological asymmetry in animals.

Yegor B. Malashichev is Assistant Professor for Zoology at the Department of Vertebrate Zoology in St. Petersburg State University, Russia, and currently is an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow in the Institute of Anatomy and Cell Biology in Freiburg University, Ger many. M ain research interests include skeleton development and evolution as well as developmental and evolutionary aspects of vertebrate lateralization. A. Wallace Deckel is a Professor at the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington, Connecticut, where he works as a senior Neuropsychologist in the Department of Psychiatry. He has published widely in the area of cerebral specialization. This work has included the study of lateralized aggression in the lizard Anolis carolinesis and monoaminergic control of ethanol consumption in the rodent.

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