#Question id: 3477
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Which one of the following statements is INCORRECT?
#Question id: 3478
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Natural selection may favour the evolution of foraging behaviours by predator that
#Question id: 3479
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Which of the following could be classified as habituation?
A) You enter a room and hear a fan motor. After a period of time, you are no longer aware of the motorʹs noise.
B) You hear a horn while driving your car. You step on the brakes but notice the sound came from a side street. You resume your previous speed.
C) One morning you awake to a beep-beep-beep from a garbage truck working on a new early morning schedule. The next week the garbage truck arrives at the same time and makes the same noise, but does not wake you up.
#Question id: 3480
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Which of the following statements about learning and behavior is correct?
A) Operant conditioning involves associating a behavior with a reward or punishment.
B) Associative learning involves linking one stimulus with another.
C) Behavior can be modified by learning, but some apparent learning is due to maturation.
D) Imprinting is a learned behavior with an innate component acquired during a sensitive period.
#Question id: 3481
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Classical conditioning and operant conditioning differ in that
A) classical conditioning takes longer.
B) operant conditioning usually involves more intelligence.
C) operant conditioning involves consequences for the animalʹs behavior.
D) classical conditioning is restricted to mammals and birds.
#Question id: 3482
#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
Which statement below about mating behavior is correct?
A) Some aspects of courtship behavior may have evolved from agonistic interactions.
B) The degree to which evolution affects mating relationships depends on the degree of prenatal and postnatal input the parents are required to make.
C) The mating relationship in most mammals is monogamous, to ensure the reproductive success of the pair.
D) Polygamous relationships most often involve a single male and many females, but in some species this is reversed