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mrmatthewsharp

Startle durations reveal visual assessment a... [Behav Processes. 2010] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  • during aggressive encounters between male convict cichlids
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      I read somewhere that Male Convict Cichlids will challenge other animals that will be twice their size. Is this what female Convict Cichlids look for in their mates?
mrmatthewsharp

BioOne Online Journals - MALE-FEMALE DIFFERENCES IN PARENTAL CARE IN MONOGAMOUS CRESTED... - 1 views

  • e suggest that males took on a greater role in chick brooding than their mates
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      This is a little different then what I'm doing but for some reason it made me wonder if males have a bigger role in racing convict cichlids. If so, would the offspring recognize his scent more than the female's scent?
  • and thus better equipped than females to guard young chicks or the crevice breeding site.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Male Convict Cichlids do this too!! Why is it that males were designed to be "protectors"? Just a random thought I had.
mrmatthewsharp

BioOne Online Journals - Determinants of Outcomes of Agonistic Interactions among Male ... - 0 views

  • We used an overdispersed binomial logistic regression to determine if initiators and resident males were more likely to win an interaction than noninitiators and nonresidents, respectively. We f
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Home field advantage? I read that male Convict Cichlids will protect their mating grounds. Could they lose in an interaction with another male? How many times would the male win or lose and does it matter if its on his "turf"?
mrmatthewsharp

Care and Breeding of Convict Cichlids in Freshwater Aquariums: Hardy Fish and Ideal for... - 1 views

  • If keeping a pair of Convict Cichlids, the minimum aquarium size should be at least 20 gallons.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      I'll need to remember this when I look for the holding tanks.
  • plenty of hiding places for breeding and for reducing aggression.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      I wonder why having hiding places reduces there aggression. This doesn't really have anything to do with my project but I'm still curious.
  • The PH of the water should be in the range of 6.5 to 8.8. The hardness of the water is ideal at dH 4 to 20. The water temperature should be kept between 68F to 81F.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Some more important information that I'll need to know!!
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • It is best to keep the Convict Cichlids in pairs, rather then in a colony.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      If this is the case, would it still be ok to put them all in the same holding tank? I'd like to have at least four cichlids to have for my different trials.
  • archocentrus nigrofasciatus
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Important info. I'll need to know.
Jessica Ball

Think you'll ace that test? Think again, then start studying - 2 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      My idea is to have individual words flash up on a computer screen one at a time... wait 5 minutes... then have the subjects take some sort of test making them choose or write the words that had been flashed to them previously... like the ImPact test
  • The number of study opportunities did affect memory -- and the more repetitions, the better the performance.
    • Jessica Ball
       
      Flash words on screen twice to remember?
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Actually, "effortful processing" leads to more stable learning. And "the way we encode information is not based on ease; it's based on meaning." We remember what is meaningful to us
  • The Ease of Processing Heuristic and the Stability Bias: Dissociating Memory, Memory Beliefs, and Memory Judgments
    • Jessica Ball
       
      please ask ms. cory if she can find
Erin Nash

EBSCOhost: Feeling blue? Sniff a lemon - 1 views

    • Erin Nash
       
      Hmmm...only issue here is that this from "Natural Health" so it seems to be more of a home-remedy type article. Thsi also deals with mood boosting rather than memory recall - just a few things to think about!
Jessica Ball

PsycNET - Display Record - 2 views

shared by Jessica Ball on 15 Sep 11 - No Cached
    • Jessica Ball
       
      This is it!!! This is the closest thing I've found to my experiment. I need to look up the difference between 'ambient' and 'citrus,' though. Look deeper?
    • Erin Nash
       
      I've sent this to the librarian to see if she can access the full text for you - it does look like a promising article! What we need to get in the practice of doing is looking up words like ambient while we read, and recording that type of info in our notebooks!
    • Erin Nash
       
      ambient |ˈambēənt|adjective [ attrib. ]of or relating to the immediate surroundings of something : the liquid is stored at below ambient temperature.
Jessica Ball

EBSCOhost: Feeling blue? Sniff a lemon - 2 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      okay... so lemon is a possibility for my citrus scent. this study says that there could be a link between lemons and good feelings... but what about memory? having the hardest time finding anything that says ANY smell enhances memory
Jessica Ball

The brain knows what the nose smells, but how? - 1 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      This article has background info on the nose-brain relationship.
    • Erin Nash
       
      Good - if you do explore something scent/memory related - this will be valuable information to have
Erin Nash

When you can recite a poem but not remember who asked you to learn it a few days earlier - 1 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      Could the citrus scent (rumored to jog memories during test) stir episodic memory?
    • Erin Nash
       
      It appears that episodic memory allows you to remember events - whereas semantic memory is linked to knowledge/intelligence.
  • VJ does do well on tests of general knowledge, also called semantic memory.
    • Erin Nash
       
      Citrus may help with this type of memory....
mrmatthewsharp

Birdsong independent of brain size: Sex difference in the brain varies according to soc... - 0 views

  • The brains of all vertebrates display gender-related differences. In songbirds, for example, the size of the brain areas that control their singing behaviour could be linked to the size of their song repertoires.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      I had always thought birds songs depended on the mood they were in and whether or not they were in danger.
mrmatthewsharp

Ant colonies: Behavioral variability wins - 0 views

  • ant colonies are more productive and raise more offspring when the workers in the colony display considerable variation in their levels of aggression.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      This reminds me of Spartans. How they trained at a young age and were raised in an aggressive manner. I think it be cool to have and ant farm with two different types of ants in it and see what happens. See if they invade each other.
  • behavior of worker ants and the division of labor in a colony,
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Do they get their jobs depending on their behavior?
mrmatthewsharp

How Fish Hire a Cleaning Service | LiveScience - 0 views

  • or they can cheat and dine on the clients mucus, the tastier option.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      What causes some to have self control and others to "cheat" and eat the mucus? I didn't know fish could be greedy and selfish.
mrmatthewsharp

Fish Punish Fish For Bad Manners | LiveScience - 0 views

  • would punish, or chase away, the female fish if the females ate a prawn. Once the females had been chastised, they were less likely to gulp down prawns.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      Is it possible for the Females to "punish" the males if the males were to do the same thing? Could this be something we could study in class? I'm kind of liking this one.
mrmatthewsharp

Shy trout size it up - 0 views

  • Also brown trout differ among each other in their level of aggression and react differently to changes in their surroundings,
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      What triggers their aggression? Could it be a territory thing? Do they get aggressive to attract mates? What causes this instinct.
    • mrmatthewsharp
       
      I think this is a great survival Technique. But would a mate still be attracted to them if they are shy. How would they create a "group" if they are shy?
Jessica Ball

Testing improves memory: Study examines why memory is enhanced by repeated retrieval - 0 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      At the BHS-LB game last night, Hoffman told my dad and I that Jimmy Sparks wasn't only talented in pole-vaulting and drama, but that he was also very smart. Mr. Hoffman told us that Jimmy made up his own tests prior to the actual ones given in class. No doubt  it helped him a ton.
  • only for the exact thing you are trying to remember: so-called "target memory.
  • 131 undergraduates and the other, 69. In both preparation sessions, English-Lithuanian word pairs were displayed on a computer screen one by one, each for 10 seconds of study. After studying the list, the participants underwent retrieval trials: A Lithuanian word appeared and they had to type the English equivalent within eight seconds. If the answer was correct, the word went to the end of the list to be asked again. If wrong, the participant got to restudy it. Each item was pre-assigned a "criterion level" from one to five -- the number of times it needed to be correctly recalled during practice. Once that level was reached, the word was dropped
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • two days later in Experiment 1, seven in Experiment 2
  • Items with higher "criterion levels" -- which had been correctly retrieved more times during practice -- exhibited better performance on tests of all three kinds of memory: cue, target, and associative
Erin Nash

For Marmots, Too Many Brothers Turns Gals into Tomboys | Masculinization, Sex Hormones ... - 0 views

    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Wow, that's crazy! I never thought of animals wanting to be the opposite sex, because of having too many of the same gender of siblings.
  • Extra testosterone from their brothers in the womb changes the females’ behavior.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      I wonder if this can happen with other species of animals too? Or if it can relate to humans in a way...somehow!
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • Previously, the researchers had classified marmots with long AG distances are males and shorter AG distances are females. Classification based just on AG distances first led to some confused researchers. Some of the long AG distance marmots, which researchers thought were males, seemed to undergo a sex change — they were actually females all along. Previous research has shown that these females with longer AG distances come from litters containing more males than females. And since the AG distance indicates testosterone exposure in the womb, the researchers figured the brother's testosterone had changed the female's AG distance; they wondered if it had any effect on the female marmots' behaviors, as well.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Okay, that is flipping crazy! So, females that have tons of brothers end up having a longer AG distance! That really stinks for them, because they have to blame their brothers and their brother's hormones. And yeah, this should have an effect on behavior! Especially if it's going to cause a physical change..
  • wandered farther and pursued more play-fighting with more play partners than the more feminine females.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      So this is the behavior they saw with the "masculine females"
  • Whether a litter is male- or female-biased is dictated by the environment.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      How can environment have an effect on what gender a litter will be? I thought gender was completely random..50/50 chance...?
  • Male animals traditionally need more investment from their mothers, because they are larger. In some conditions, like when the environment is steady and resources are plenty, it might make sense to invest more in males. "For instance,  when mothers are in good conditions they usually have male-biased litters, whereas in bad body condition they have female-biased litters."
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Does this mean that it depends on the environment whether the moms want their sons to live or daughters? Do some end up dying to give these biased litters? Or do the moms store food for the babies, therefore getting more nutrition for males in better conditions? I feel like this can go many ways??
  • If hormones like testosterone from littermates are impacting marmots' behavior and reproduction, chemical pollutants that have similar structures could screw up these signals.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Ah hah!! Here is a lead :)
  • These pollutants, also known as endocrine disruptors, could interfere with the mothers' intended "decision" to have a female- or male-biased litter.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      I still don't understand how the mothers choose what the gender of their offspring are. Wouldn't it have to be after birth?
  • "They explore much more of their environment. In a small area when you explore more you bump against more individuals," study researcher Raquel Monclus, of Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (though the study was done at the University of California, Los Angeles), told LiveScience. "They are the ones initiating the play more often than females from female-biased litters."
    • Erin Nash
       
      Okay - so I've read that the reason females are worse with direction/maps is because they aren't allowed to explore as much when children. Is being exploratory more of a"male" trait!
Marcy Withrow

People See Odd Numbers as Male, Even as Female | Grammatical Gender | Psychology & Abst... - 0 views

    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Yeah, this happens all the time! they'll refer to an object as male or female..
    • Erin Nash
       
      Yes - boats are often "shes" :)
  • Scientists have long known that language can influence how we perceive gender in objects. Some languages consistently refer to certain objects as male or female, and this in turn, influences how speakers of that language think about those objects.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      I know the Spanish language uses masculine and feminine words, but I've never really thought of them thinking of that object as male or female.
    • Erin Nash
       
      I asked Frida about this - she agreed that she thought the moon was "more like a woman" - what do you think?
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • They found that people rated each object according to its grammatical gender.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      And why wouldn't they? That's how they speak! :)
  • Aside from language, objects can also become infused with gender based on their appearance, who typically uses them, and whether they seem to possess the type of characteristics usually associated with men or women.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      this is good to keep in mind too. It would be interesting to see if people think an object is male or female based on these ideas.
  • They found that people see food dishes containing meat as more masculine and salads and sour dairy products as more feminine. People see furniture items, such as tables and trash cans, as more feminine when they feature rounded, rather than sharp, edges.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Has our society put this image into humans brains? Seeing more vulnerable things as feminine and stronger items as masculine??
    • Erin Nash
       
      Is it because of society? OR...is this a basic human condition, regardless of the society you belong to?
  • In another study, Wilkie and Bodenhausen showed participants photos of babies and asked them to determine for each photo the likelihood that the baby was male. They found that when a baby photo was paired with the number 1, people were much more likely to think the baby was male. Once again, people reported no awareness that the numbers were influencing their perceptions.
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      The participants said that numbers made no influence. Later on it talks about how people rated the #1 and odd numbers more masculine and #2 and even number more feminine. once again, does society and the way we see things make a difference. It has to!
  • stereotypes
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Ah hah!! Stereotypes...exactly the word i was looking for! once again, societies outlook.
    • Erin Nash
       
      Super interesting! However, stereotypes often have their basis in fact.....
  • It's no surprise that the first thing that most people ask new parents is whether they had a boy or a girl. When we don’t know somebody's gender, it creates confusion in our minds
    • Marcy Withrow
       
      Does this mean that it's in our minds that we MUST have a gender for every object, even though we don't mean to purposely.
    • Erin Nash
       
      I don't know? Is a chair a male or a female? I vote neither :)
  • Our brains can't help but see gender everywhere we look.
Erin Nash

People with depression get stuck on bad thoughts, unable to turn their attention away, ... - 1 views

    • Jessica Ball
       
      This could be a possible experiment.
    • Erin Nash
       
      The issue we will run into (and this is a large issue) is finding people for the study who are depressed. Since it is a confidential medical condition, and we would be looking for people who had been diagnosed with depression, I know there would definitely be confidentiality issues. Scientific issues as well - people would have to volunteer for the study who have depression - and when subjects aren't chosen randomly, that may have a slight effect on results as well.
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