Search
Skip to Search Results
Filter
Subject / Keyword
- 2Cerebral lateralization
- 2Convict cichlid
- 1Aggression
- 1Archocentrus nigrofaciatus
- 1Boldness
- 1Damage-induced alarm cues
Author / Creator / Contributor
Year
Collections
Languages
Item type
Departments
Supervisors
-
Sex, personaltiy and individual differences in cerebral lateralization in the convict cichlid
DownloadFall 2009
Cerebral lateralization was once thought to be unique to humans, but is now known to be widespread among the vertebrates. Lateralization appears to confer cognitive advantages upon those that possess it. Despite the taxonomic ubiquity and described advantages of lateralization, substantial...
-
Size, Sex, and Stress: Factors affecting lateralized behaviour and boldness in the convict cichlid (Amatitlania nigrofasciata)
DownloadFall 2014
Cerebral lateralization, the partitioning of cognitive functions preferentially into one hemisphere of the brain, is a trait ubiquitous among vertebrates. Although this trait is pervasive, not all individuals show the same degree or direction of lateralized behaviour. Individual differences in...
1 - 2 of 2