Overview
- Editors:
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Mark N. O. Davies
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Department of Psychology, University College London, London, UK
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Patrick R. Green
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Department of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
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Table of contents (19 chapters)
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- Mark N. O. Davies, Patrick R. Green
Pages 1-3
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- R. Wiltschko, W. Wiltschko
Pages 95-119
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- Mark N. O. Davies, Patrick R. Green
Pages 121-123
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- J. D. Deich, P. D. Balsam
Pages 160-181
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- H. P. Zeigler, R. Bermejo, R. Bout
Pages 182-200
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- G. Zweers, R. Bout, J. Heidweiller
Pages 201-221
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- Mark N. O. Davies, Patrick R. Green
Pages 223-225
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- B. J. Frost, D. R. Wylie, Y. C. Wang
Pages 248-269
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- M. N. O. Davies, P. R. Green
Pages 339-356
About this book
Being both broad - perception and motor organization - and
narrow - just onegroup of animals - at the same time, this
book presents a new unified framework for understanding
perceptuomotor organization, stressing the importance of an
ecological perspective. Section I reviews recent research on
a variety of sensory and perceptual processes in birds,
which all involve subtle analyses of the relationships
between species' perceptual mechanisms and their ecology and
behaviour. Section II describes the variousresearch
approaches - behavioural, neurophysiological, anatomical and
comparative - all dealing with the common problem of
understanding how the activities of large numbers of muscles
are coordinated to generate adaptive behaviour. Section III
is concerned with a range of approaches to analyzing the
links between perceptual and motor processes, through
cybernetic modelling, neurophysiological analysis, and
behavioural methods.
Reviews
"I cannot imagine a reader who will not find something completely new: some technique of which they have not heard, some recent discovery in a field with which they are relatively unfamiliar...even though each chapter provides its own useful entre into one of a wide range of research fields, it is their bringing together that provides the real inspiration." - IBIS
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Psychology, University College London, London, UK
Mark N. O. Davies
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Department of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
Patrick R. Green