Behaviour is the ultimate output of an animal's nervous system and choosing the right action at the right time can be critical for survival. The study of the organisation of behaviour in its natural context, ethology, has historically been a primarily qualitative science. A quantitative theory of behaviour would advance research in neuroscience as well as ecology and evolution. However, animal posture typically has many degrees of freedom and behavioural dynamics vary on timescales ranging from milliseconds to years, presenting both technical and conceptual challenges. Here we review 1) advances in imaging and computer vision that are making it possible to capture increasingly complete records of animal motion and 2) new approaches to under...
Understanding behavior has been a crucial aim for philosophers and scientists since Aristotle and, p...
As any animal observer will tell you, behavior is complex. A more holistic view of this complexity i...
The nervous functions of an organism are primarily reflected in the behavior it is capable of. Measu...
The study of animal behaviour, ethology, is becoming more quantitative. New theory is emerging, driv...
The movements an organism makes provide insights into its internal states and motives. This principl...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
The scientific study of animal behaviour is called ethology, and it often focuses on behaviour in it...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
The new field of “Computational Ethology” is made possible by advances in technology, mathematics, a...
The new field of “Computational Ethology” is made possible by advances in technology, mathematics, a...
Understanding how the brain generates behavior is a core goal of neuroscience. The need for tools to...
The field of ethology seeks to understand animal behavior from both mechanistic and functional persp...
Animal Behavior uses Tinbergen's four questions-causation, survival value, ontogeny and evolution-to...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
The study of animal behavior is a fundamental pursuit for answering scientific questions across a va...
Understanding behavior has been a crucial aim for philosophers and scientists since Aristotle and, p...
As any animal observer will tell you, behavior is complex. A more holistic view of this complexity i...
The nervous functions of an organism are primarily reflected in the behavior it is capable of. Measu...
The study of animal behaviour, ethology, is becoming more quantitative. New theory is emerging, driv...
The movements an organism makes provide insights into its internal states and motives. This principl...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
The scientific study of animal behaviour is called ethology, and it often focuses on behaviour in it...
Animal movement acts at multiple scales: it can shape the destiny of individuals and populations, go...
The new field of “Computational Ethology” is made possible by advances in technology, mathematics, a...
The new field of “Computational Ethology” is made possible by advances in technology, mathematics, a...
Understanding how the brain generates behavior is a core goal of neuroscience. The need for tools to...
The field of ethology seeks to understand animal behavior from both mechanistic and functional persp...
Animal Behavior uses Tinbergen's four questions-causation, survival value, ontogeny and evolution-to...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
The study of animal behavior is a fundamental pursuit for answering scientific questions across a va...
Understanding behavior has been a crucial aim for philosophers and scientists since Aristotle and, p...
As any animal observer will tell you, behavior is complex. A more holistic view of this complexity i...
The nervous functions of an organism are primarily reflected in the behavior it is capable of. Measu...