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E-raamat: Optima for Animals: Revised Edition

  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Nov-2020
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691221601
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  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Nov-2020
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691221601

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Optimization theory is designed to find the best ways of doing things. The structures of animals, their movements, their behavior, and their life histories have all been shaped by the optimizing processes of evolution or of learning by trial and error. In this revised edition of R. McNeill Alexander's widely acclaimed Optima for Animals, we see how extraordinarily diverse branches of biology are illuminated by the powerful methods of optimization theory.


What is the best strength for a bone? Too weak a bone will probably break but an excessively stout one will be cumbersome. At what speed should humans change from walking to running? Should a bird take only big juicy worms or should it eat every worm it finds, and do birds make the best choices? Why do the males of some species of fishes and the females of others look after the young, while the young of others are looked after by both parents or neither? Is it possible that all these policies can be optimal, in different circumstances? This book shows how these and many other questions can be answered. The mathematics involved is explained very simply, with biology students in mind, but the book is not just for them. It is also for professionals, ranging from teachers to researchers.

Arvustused

"This is a comprehensively revised edition, now taking in not only optimum structures and movements, but also the games theory of animal behaviour strategies and life styles. . . . It is in this breadth of its Darwinian perspective and the detail of its analysis and examples that the book's strength lies." * Journal of Biological Education *

Preface vii
Introduction
1(16)
Optimization and evolution
1(1)
Maxima and minima
1(6)
Optima for aircraft
7(1)
Fitting lines
8(3)
The best shape for cans
11(2)
The shortest path
13(2)
Conclusion
15(2)
Optimum structures
17(28)
Tubular bones
17(5)
Strengths of bones
22(8)
Compound eyes
30(5)
Eggshells
35(4)
Semicircular canals
39(1)
Herbivore guts
40(5)
Optimum movements
45(20)
Bounding flight
45(3)
High jumping
48(2)
Walking and running
50(6)
Gaits of dogs and sheep
56(2)
Gaits for tortoises
58(7)
Optimum behaviour
65(40)
Choosing worms
65(3)
Food for a moose
68(3)
When to give up
71(4)
Ideal free ducks
75(1)
Two-armed bandits
76(8)
Hunger and thirst
84(4)
Gamble when desperate
88(3)
Hunting lions
91(1)
Territories
92(3)
Discretion or valour
95(10)
Optimum life-styles
105(36)
How many eggs?
105(4)
When to make queens
109(8)
Growing or breeding
117(8)
Breeding and survival
125(5)
Sex ratios
130(4)
A battle of the sexes
134(3)
Parents and cuckolders
137(4)
Dangers and difficulties
141(10)
What is optimized?
141(4)
What is possible?
145(1)
What can go wrong?
146(2)
Criticisms
148(3)
Mathematical summary
151(10)
Maxima of functions of one variable
151(2)
Maxima of functions of several variables
153(1)
Maxima of functions with constraints
153(1)
Linear programming
154(1)
Maximum of the smaller of two alternatives
155(2)
Calculus of variations
157(1)
The Pontryagin method
157(1)
Dynamic programming
158(1)
Evolutionarily stable strategies
158(1)
Catastrophe theory
159(2)
References 161(6)
Index 167
R. McNeill Alexander is Professor of Zoology at the University of Leeds and Secretary of the Zoological Society of London. The author of fourteen books, most of them on the mechanics of human and animal movement, Alexander is a Fellow of the Royal Society and a recipient of the Muybridge Medal of the International Society for Biomechanics.