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Academic & Professional Books  Organismal to Molecular Biology  Ethology

Coding and Redundancy Man-Made and Animal-Evolved Signals

By: Jack P Hailman
257 pages, 25 line illustrations, 14 tables
Coding and Redundancy
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  • Coding and Redundancy ISBN: 9780674027954 Hardback Jun 2008 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £79.95
    #173887
Price: £79.95
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

This book explores the strikingly similar ways in which information is encoded in nonverbal man-made signals (e.g., traffic lights and tornado sirens) and animal-evolved signals (e.g., color patterns and vocalizations). The book also considers some coding principles for reducing certain unwanted redundancies and explains how desirable redundancies enhance communication reliability.

Jack Hailman believes this work pioneers several aspects of analyzing human and animal communication. The book is the first to survey man-made signals as a class. It is also the first to compare such human-devised systems with signaling in animals by showing the highly similar ways in which the two encode information. A third innovation is generalizing principles of quantitative information theory to apply to a broad range of signaling systems. Finally, another first is distinguishing among types of redundancy and their separation into unwanted and desirable categories.

This remarkably novel book will be of interest to a wide readership. Appealing not only to specialists in semiotics, animal behavior, psychology, and allied fields but also to general readers, it serves as an introduction to animal signaling and to an important class of human communication.

Contents

List of Tables and Figures Foreword Preface 1. Introduction Part I. Coding 2. Binary Coding 3. Multi-valued Coding 4. Multivariate Coding Part II. Redundancy 5. Intrinsic Redundancy 6. Redundancy Reduction 7. Designed Redundancy Appendix A: List of Equations Appendix B: How to Find Base-2 Logarithms on a Pocket Calculator Appendix C: Binary Pervasiveness Notes References Index

Customer Reviews

Biography

Jack P. Hailman is Professor Emeritus of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, and Research Associate, Archbold Biological Station.
By: Jack P Hailman
257 pages, 25 line illustrations, 14 tables
Media reviews
[Coding and Redundancy] will provide behavioral ecologists with new ideas about the mechanisms underlying communication, which may give fresh insights into signal evolution. -- Redouan Bshary Nature 20081101 Hailman employs numerous examples to make the case that coding patterns and redundancy in both animals and human signaling have much in common. The strength of this book lies in Hailman's ability to support mathematical theory with specific examples based on his vast knowledge of animal behavior. -- F. T. Kuserk Choice 20081101
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