Results 251 to 260 of about 1,350,044 (307)
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The question of animal culture
Human Nature, 1992In this paper I consider whether traditional behaviors of animals, like traditions of humans, are transmitted by imitation learning. Review of the literature on problem solving by captive primates, and detailed consideration of two widely cited instances of purported learning by imitation and of culture in free-living primates (sweet-potato washing by ...
Bennett G Galef +2 more
exaly +3 more sources
Animal culture: But of which kind? [PDF]
Is animal culture a real entity or is it rather just in the eye of the beholder? The concept of culture began to be increasingly used in the context of animal behaviour research around the 1960s.
Hugo Viciana
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International audienceThe concept of culture, once viewed as a uniquely human trait, is now accepted to occur widely across the animal kingdom. Beginning with the groundbreaking discoveries of Japanese macaques and their innovative behaviors of potato ...
Cédric Sueur +2 more
core +3 more sources
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 2006
Recent interest in animal cultures has been fuelled by high-profile reports of intra- and interpopulation differences in the behavioural repertoires of primates and cetaceans, consistent with the existence of socially learned traditions. Several studies have mapped spatial differences in behaviour, revealing a mosaic of behavioural phenotypes within ...
Kevin N, Laland, Vincent M, Janik
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Recent interest in animal cultures has been fuelled by high-profile reports of intra- and interpopulation differences in the behavioural repertoires of primates and cetaceans, consistent with the existence of socially learned traditions. Several studies have mapped spatial differences in behaviour, revealing a mosaic of behavioural phenotypes within ...
Kevin N, Laland, Vincent M, Janik
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The burgeoning reach of animal culture
Science, 2021We are not alone Before the mid-20th century, it was generally assumed that culture, behavior learned from others, was specific to humans. However, starting with identification in a few species, evidence that animals can learn and transmit behaviors has accumulated at an ever-increasing pace.
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Physiology of cultured animal cells
Journal of Biotechnology, 1997The physiology of cultured animal cells, in particular hybridoma, myeloma and insect cells, with respect to growth and proliferation, amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism and cellular responses to environmental stress is discussed in this paper. The rate of proliferation of hybridoma cells in serum-containing media is limited by growth factors at a
M, Doverskog +3 more
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The animal cell culture collection
In Vitro, 1970The Animal Cell Culture Collection established by the Advisory Committee and cooperating laboratories at the American Type Culture Collection has been described. The description includes procedures and criteria for the acceptance and certification of cells, guidelines for future studies, and policies for the selection of cells.
C S, Stulberg +3 more
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