L16 - Play Flashcards
What are 5 key criteria for play?
- Not fully functional, does not immediately contribute to fitness
- Spontaneous, done for its own sake
- Exaggerated, incomplete, awkward
- Repeated, often at particular developmental stage
- Occurs in conditions of safety, free from stresses
What is behavioural ecology?
The study of behavioural interactions between individuals within populations and communities, usually in an evolutionary context
Give an example of the fish species cichlid playing
The cichlid repeatedly strike weeble-like thermometer, irrespective of presence of food or other fish
In mammals, what is the relationship between brain size and volume of playing? Which order is this not seen in?
As brain size increases so does the volume of play
Not seen in carnivores
What is ontogenetic?
The origination and development of an organism
Give 2 examples of different ontogenic patterns of play
In rats, play is most intense between weaning and pre-adolescence but drops off before adulthood
In dolphins and chimps, play begins after weaning and stays at nearly the same intensity throughout life
What are examples of the cost of play?
- In South American fur seals, of 26 pups that died 84% of them died during play
- Play by cheetah cubs causes 1.5% of mother’s hunts to fail by alerting prey
- In assamese macaque, play had negative impact on growth
In macaque, what was the relationship between play and both growth and skill acquisition?
Play had negative impact on growth & positive impact on skill acquisition
In terms of skill and energy what are the two categories play falls in to?
- Low cost, using surplus energy, little skill developed
- Beneficial, trains motor skills, higher cost
In juvenile vervet monkeys, what was the relationship between volume of play and food availability? And what does this suggest about costs?
When there was less food available the monkeys played less.
Suggests costs are important & that there are strong energetic constraints to play
What are the benefits of play?
- Enhanced motor skills
- Enhanced physiological development
- Integration of sensory systems
- Experience adult-like roles
- Communication skills and interpretation
- Degree of dominance status
- Learn about novel objects/conspecifics
- Neural development
- Flexible thinking
How do rats deprived of play respond to negative stimuli compared to control rats?
Play deprived rats respond more negatively to negative stimuli than control rats
What are the 3 types of play?
Object play - play with an object that is not alive (edible or non-edible)
Locomotion play - jumping, tail chasing, running, turning, carried out alone
Social play - any play with another individual
When shown 44 novel objects, which type of objects did juvenile ravens continue to pay attention?
Only edible objects
In mice, rats and cats, what coincides with time of maximum play?
Synaptogenesis