Brain, Behaviour and Evolution

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adaptive behaviour mechanisms
Animal
Animal Kingdom
Behavioural Homology
Brain Behaviour Relationships
Brain Behaviour Studies
Brain Size
Brain Weight
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Christopher H. Yeo
comparative cognition
consciousness studies
Cross-modal Matching
Cross-modal Transfer
EEG Indicator
EEG Trace
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Evolutionary
evolutionary basis of human behaviour
evolutionary psychology
Extrapyramidal Motor System
Gaylord D. Ellison
genetics
H. C. Plotkin
High Voltage Slow Wave
I. Steele Russell
Left Hemisphere
Linda Partridge
Midbrain Reticular Formation
Neocortical Tissue
neurogenetics
Normal Sleep Conditions
Oakley
Optic Tectum
R. W. Sperry
Ray Meddis
Relative Brain Size
Sleep Control Mechanism
Spinal Cord
Split Brain Patient
Stuart J. Dimond
Tree Shrew
Vertebrate Nervous System
vertebrate neuroanatomy
Visual Neocortex
Vital Organ Transplants

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138555365
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1979, this book provides students with an example of the ways in which an evolutionary perspective can rephrase and clarify traditional questions and issues in psychology. The format provides the student firstly with the minimal amount of basic information in neuroanatomy, genetics and modern evolutionary theory in a form which is readily related to the remainder of the volume. The book then goes on to consider the relationships between different forms of explanation in biology, and the role of brain behaviour students in these relationships. Finally, the reader is given an opportunity to follow the reasoning which stems from a biological approach when applied to topics in human behaviour such as learning, dreaming, sleeping, exploration, anxiety, reasoning, intelligence and consciousness. Modern evolutionary biology places man in a broader context than does traditional psychology, and this new perspective reduces our tendency to view life solely from a human standpoint. The significance as well as the uniqueness of some traditionally ‘human’ attributes are challenged by this approach.

David A. Oakley and H. C. Plotkin