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OverviewCommunication is essential for all forms of social interaction, from parental care to mate choice and cooperation. This is evident for human societies but less obvious for bacterial biofilms, ant colonies or flocks of birds. The major disciplines of communication research have tried to identify common core principles, but syntheses have been few because historical barriers have limited interaction between different research fields.Sociobiology of Communication is a timely and novel synthesis. It bridges many of the gaps between proximate and ultimate levels of analysis, between empirical model systems, and between biology and the humanities. The book offers the complementary approaches of a distinguished group of authors spanning a large diversity of research programs, addressing, for example, the genetic basis of bacterial communication, dishonest communication in insect societies, sexual selection and network communication among colonial vertebrates. Other chapters explore the role of communication in genomic conflict and self-organisation, and how linguistics, psychology and philosophy may ultimately contribute to a biological understanding of human mate choice and the evolution of human societies. This highly interdisciplinary book highlights key examples of modern research to explore the genetic, neurobiological, physiological, chemical and behavioural basis of social communication. It identifies where consensus on the general principles is emerging and where the major future challenges are to be found. The book is therefore suitable for both for graduate students and professionals in evolutionary biology and behavioural ecology seeking novel inspiration, and for a wider academic audience, including social and medical scientists who would like to explore what evolutionary approaches can offer to their fields. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Patrizia d'Ettorre (Centre for Social Evolution, University of Copenhagen) , David P. Hughes (Centre for Social Evolution, Universtiy of Copenhagen)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 19.60cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.876kg ISBN: 9780199216833ISBN 10: 0199216835 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 21 August 2008 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsPatrizia d'Ettorre & David P.Hughes: Foreword 1: Amotz Zahavi: The Handicap Principle and Signalling in Collaborative Systems 2: Steve Diggle, Stuart West, Andy Gardner & Ashleigh Griffin: Communication in Bacteria 3: Giuliano Matessi, Ricardo Matos & Torben Dabelsteen: Communication in Social Networks of Territorial Animals: Networking at Different Levels in Birds and Other Systems 4: David Nash and J.J. Boomsma: Communication between Hosts and Social Parasites 5: Patrizia d'Ettorre & Allen Moore: Chemical Communication and the Coordination of Social Interactions in Insects 6: Jane Hurst and Robert Beyon: Chemical Communication in Societies of Rodents 7: Maria Gabriela de Brito-Sanchez, Nina Deisig, Jean-Christophe Sandoz & Martin Giurfa: Neurobiology of Olfactory Communication in the Honeybee 8: Marlene Zuk & Robin M.Tinghitella: Rapid Evolution and Sexual Signals 9: S.Craig Roberts: Communication of Mate Quality in Humans 10: David P Hughes: The Extended Phenotype within the Colony and how it Obscurers Social Communication 11: David J.T.Sumpter & Åke Brännström: Synergy in Social Communication 12: David Haig: Conflicting Messages: Genomic Imprinting and Internal Communication 13: Bernard Crespi: Language Unbound:Genomic Imprinting and Psychosis in the Origin and Evolution of Modern Humans 14: James R. Hurford: The Evolution of Human Communication and Language 15: Livio Roboli-Sasco, Sam Brown & François Taddei: Why Teach? The Evolutionary Origins and Ecological Consequences of Costly Information Transfer 16: Ronnie de Sousa: Grades of Signalling 17: David P. Hughes & Patrizia d'Ettorre: Conclusion GlossaryReviewsIf one wants to be challenged to think outside of the box this book represents a good exercise. Michael J. Ryan TREE ...d'Ettore and Haughes have assembled a diverse selection of chapters which provide a fertile starting point for researchers, especially for those working to synthesise communication concepts across disciplines. Duncan E. Jackson Current Biology ...will allow students of animal communication to learn the language of linguists-and a new generation of scientists with broad training and rigorously defined concepts can be expected. Understanding other disciplines, and using their advances to critically examine your own premises is often the way to progress in science. Buy this book if you want to be part of that progress. Myrmecological News d 'The brevity of each chapter helps give readers a quick flavour of many topics of interest and in my view fulfils the editors' goal of eliciting a cross-fertilisation of ideas among traditionally separate disciplines.[...] d'Ettore and Hughes have assembled a diverse selection of chapters which provide a fertile starting point for researchers, especially for those working to synthesise communication concepts across disciplines.' Duncan E. Jackson, Current Biology If one wants to be challenged to think outside of the box this book represents a good exercise. Michael J. Ryan TREE ...d'Ettore and Haughes have assembled a diverse selection of chapters which provide a fertile starting point for researchers, especially for those working to synthesise communication concepts across disciplines. Duncan E. Jackson Current Biology ...will allow students of animal communication to learn the language of linguists-and a new generation of scientists with broad training and rigorously defined concepts can be expected. Understanding other disciplines, and using their advances to critically examine your own premises is often the way to progress in science. Buy this book if you want to be part of that progress. Myrmecological News d 'The brevity of each chapter helps give readers a quick flavour of many topics of interest and in my view fulfils the editors' goal of eliciting a cross-fertilisation of ideas among traditionally separate disciplines.[...] d'Ettore and Hughes have assembled a diverse selection of chapters which provide a fertile starting point for researchers, especially for those working to synthesise communication concepts across disciplines.' Duncan E. Jackson, Current Biology Author InformationAssociate Professor Patrizia d'Ettorre is at the Centre for Social Evolution, University of Copenhagen. Here she is the leader of a Marie Curie Excellence team that studies the evolutionary basis of chemical communication and recognition in insect societies. Her background is in evolutionary biology and the resolution of conflict within societies. Her personal interest in communication is not restricted to social insects, she is expanding her expertise in the evolutionary biology of chemical communication into various interfaces with other relevant disciplines using a variety of model organisms (from insects to humans). Prior to her current position she was a post-doc at the university of Regensburg in Germany and at the University of Tours in France. She received her PhD from the University of Parma, Italy, in 1996. Dr David P. Hughes is a Marie Curie research fellow at the Centre for Social Evolution, University of Copenhagen. He is interested in the manipulation of social insects by parasites, the evolution of virulence in social insects and organismal biology of parasites in social insect hosts. Before his current position he held a postdoctoral position in Oulu, Finland. He received his PhD from Oxford in 2003. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |