If you are in the field of ethology or behavioral ecology, or anything else studying animal behavior, this book gives you everything you need to know about social analyses. Hal Whitehead lays out detailed but understandable instruction on everything from data collection to software programs. I love
Analyzing Animal Societies: Quantitative Methods for Vertebrate Social Analysis
β Scribed by Hal Whitehead
- Publisher
- University of Chicago Press
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 350
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Analyzing AnimalSocieties presents a conceptual framework for analyzing social behavior and demonstrates how to put this framework into practice by collecting suitable data on the interactions and associations of individuals so that relationships can be described, and, from these, models can be derived. In addition to presenting the tools, Hal Whitehead illustrates their applicability using a wide range of real data on a variety of animal speciesβfrom bats and chimps to dolphins and birds. The techniques that Whitehead describes will be profitably adopted by scientists working with primates, cetaceans, birds, and ungulates, but the tools can be used to study societies of invertebrates, amphibians, and even humans.Analyzing AnimalSocieties will become a standard reference for those studying vertebrate social behavior and will give to these studies the kind of quality standard already in use in other areas of the life sciences.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Animals lead rich social lives. They care for one another, compete for resources, and mate. Within a society, social relationships may be simple or complex and usually vary considerably, both between different groups of individuals and over time. These social systems are fundamental to biological or
I bought this book for use in a class on rhetoric. It is difficult reading, but if you stick with it, it can help to give you a new perspcetive on thinking about the discourse around you.
Analysing Discourse is an accessible introductory textbook for all students and researchers working with real language data. Drawing on a range of social theorists from Bourdieu to Habermas, as well as his own research, Norman Fairclough's book presents a form of language analysis with a consistent