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Animal Play
Evolutionary, Comparative and Ecological Perspectives
Animal Play, first published in 1998, is an interdisciplinary study of play in animals and humans.
Marc Bekoff (Edited by), John A. Byers (Edited by)
9780521586566, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 4 June 1998
292 pages, 22 b/w illus. 8 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.415 kg
' … anyone interested in play should not hesitate to read or buy this book. It puts down a definite marker for play research in the 1990s, and suggests many interesting leads for research on play through into the next millenium.' Peter K. Smith, Animal Behaviour
Why do animals play? Play has been described in animals as diverse as reptiles, birds and mammals, so what benefits does it provide and how did it evolve? Careful, quantitative studies of social, locomotor and object play behaviour are now beginning to answer these questions and to shed light on many other aspects of both animal and human behaviour. This interdisciplinary volume, first published in 1998, brings together the major findings about play in a wide range of species including humans. Topics about play include the evolutionary history of play, play structure, function and development, and sex and individual differences. Animal Play is destined to become the benchmark volume in this subject, and will provide a source of inspiration and understanding for students and researchers in behavioural biology, neurobiology, psychology and anthropology.
1. Introduction
2. The evolutionary origins of play revisited: lessons from turtles G. M. Burghardt
3. Play in common ravens (Corvus corax) B. Heinrich and R. Smolker
4. Object play by adult animals B. Heinrich and R. Smolker
5. Kangaroos at play: play behaviour in the Macropodoidea D. M. Watson
6. Intentional communication and social play: how and why animals negotiate and agree to play M. Bekoff and C. Allen
7. The structure-function interface in the analysis of play fighting S. M. Pellis and V. C. Pellis
8. Sparring as play in young pronghorn males M. N. Miller and J. A. Byers
9. Squirrel monkey playfighting: making the case for a cognitive training hypothesis M. Biben
10. Self assessment in juvenile play K. V. Thompson
11. Biological effects of locomotor play: getting into shape, or something more specific? J. A. Byers
12. Neurobiological substrates of play behaviour: glimpses into the structure and function of mammalian playfulness S. M. Siviy
13. Play as an organizing principle: clinical evidence and personal observations S. Brown.
Subject Areas: Animal behaviour [PSVP], Evolution [PSAJ], Behavioural theory [Behaviourism JMAL]