000 | 00319nam a2200121Ia 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c180028 _d180028 |
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040 | _cCUS | ||
082 |
_a596.0159 _bEAS/C |
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245 | 0 |
_aChemical Signals In Vertebrates/ _cEas,t Marion L. [ed.] |
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260 |
_aNew York: _bSpringer, _c2013. |
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300 | _a466 | ||
505 | _aOne: Sources of Chemical Signals.- Structure and Function of Skin Glands.- Hormonal Control of Mammalian Skin Glands.- Bacteria as a Source of Chemical Signals in Mammals.- Chemical Attractants of the Rat Preputial Gland.- Two: Chemistry.- Properties of Compounds Used as Chemical Signals.- Chemical Methodology in the Study of Mammalian Communication.- Chemical and Behavioral Complexity in Mammalian Chemical Communication Systems: Guinea Pigs (Cavia porcellus), Marmosets (Saguinus fuscicollis) and Humans (Homo sapiens).- On the Chemical and Environmental Modulation of Pheromone Release from Vertebrate Scent Marks.- Three: Behavior:Reviews.- Chemical Communication in Amphibians and Reptiles.- Chemical Signals in Agonistic and Social Behavior of Rodents.- Pheromonal Influences on Rodent Agonistic Behavior.- Olfaction in Relation to Reproduction in Domestic Animals.- Four: Behavior:Laboratory Studies.- Sex Pheromones in Golden Hamsters.- Chemical Signals and Primate Behavior.- A Review of Recent Psychophysical Studies Examining the Possibility of Chemical Communication of Sex and Reproductive State in Humans.- Physical and Cognitive Limitations on Olfactory Processing in Human Beings.- Five: Ecology.- Chemical Communication as Adaptation:Alarm Substance of Fish.- The Study of Chemical Communication in Free-Ranging Mammals.- Two Hypotheses Supporting the Social Function of Odorous Secretions of Some Old World Rodents.- The Search for Applications of Chemical Signals in Wildlife Management.- Six: Bioassay.- From Insect to Mammal: Complications of the Bioassay.- Methodology and Strategies in the Laboratory.- Complex Mammalian Behavior and Pheromone Bioassay in the Field.- Seven: Reception of Chemical Signals.- Functional Anatomy of the Mammalian Chemoreceptor System.- Minimum Odorant Concentrations Detectable by the Dog and Their Implications for Olfactory Receptor Sensitivity.- Processing of Olfactory Stimuli at Peripheral Levels.- Taste Stimuli as Possible Messengers.- Eight: Central Processes.- Central Processing of Olfactory Signals.- Dynamic Aspects of Central Olfactory Processing.- On the Anatomical Substrate for Flavor.- Central Processing of Odor Signals: Lessons from Adult and Neonatal Olfactory Tract Lesions.- Central Control of Scent Marking.- Author Index. | ||
942 | _cAC8 |