Annual Reviews tagline graphic
  Hello. Sign in to get personalized recommendations. New user? Register now.
 
Home Order Browse Search Profile Help Contact Us
Abstract
Annual Review of Psychology
Vol. 57: 167-197 (Volume publication date January 2006)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070324)
First published online as a Review in Advance on September 16, 2005
Neuroecology

David F. Sherry
Department of Psychology, Program in Neuroscience, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5C2; email:

Neuroecology is the study of adaptive variation in cognition and the brain. The origin of neuroecology dates from the 1980s, when researchers in behavioral ecology began to apply the methods of comparative evolutionary biology to cognitive processes and the underlying neural mechanisms of cognition. The comparative approach, however, is much older. It was a mainstay of ethology, it has been part of the study of neuroanatomy since the seventeenth century, and it was used by Darwin to marshal evidence for the theory of natural selection. Neuroecology examines the relations between ecological selection pressures and species or sex differences in cognition and the brain. The goal of neuroecology is to understand how natural selection acts on cognition and its neural mechanisms. This chapter describes the general approach of neuroecology, phylogenetic comparative methods used in the field, and new findings on the cognitive mechanisms and brain structures involved in mating systems, social organization, communication, and foraging. The contribution of neuroecology to psychology and the neurosciences is the information it provides on the selective pressures that have influenced the evolution of cognition and brain structure.

Full TextPDF

Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)

Memory and Brain in Food-Storing Birds: Space Oddities or Adaptive Specializations?
Ethology 114(7):633-645 (2008)
Neural mechanisms of birdsong memory
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7(5):347-357 (2006)
 
Series Home > Table of Contents > Abstract

Prev. Article | Next Article
Full-text HTML
View/Print PDF (218.3 KB)
Add to Favorites
Email link to a friend

Add to CiteULike Add to Connotea Add to del.icio.us

 
 
Quick Search
for 
Author:
David F. Sherry
Keywords:
brain
cognition
evolution
behavior
comparative method

Users who read this review also read:

Annual Review of Psychology. Volume 57, Page 55-85, Jan 2006
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (359 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 
Annual Review of Psychology. Volume 57, Page 87-115, Jan 2006
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1230 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 
Annual Review of Psychology. Volume 60, Page 653-670, Jan 2009
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (2551 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 
Annual Review of Psychology. Volume 57, Page 27-53, Jan 2006
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (247 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 

2009 Annual Reviews. All Rights Reserved.
  Technology Partner - Atypon Systems, Inc.