Skip to main content
University of Texas, College of Liberal Artscollege of liberal artsuniversity of texas at austin
Psychology Departmentpsychology department
Home | Contact Us | Undergraduate Office | Graduate Office | Faculty | Alumni | News | Seay| HomePage | UT Search


About Us

Areas of Study

Labs & Affiliated Organizations

Student Resources

People

Psychology Computing Facility

Other Psychology Links

Upcoming Events and Lectures

PSY 357 Animal Learning

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PROJECT

Advising | Admission to Psychology | Course Information | Career Planning | UT Resources

Faculty:

Michael Domjan, Ph.D.

Contact:

Michael Domjan domjan@psy.utexas.edu 471-7702

Description:

We are investigating the role of learning in the social behavior of animals. The current studies focus on how learning is involved in sexual behavior. We are using domesticated quail in the research. The experiments involve studying how the animals come to anticipate sexual opportunity, how they respond to the anticipation of a sexual partner, how persistent this learned behavior is, and how it influences fertilization and reproductive success. The research is relevant for students interested in the behavioral neuroscience, animal behavior, animal cognition, and/or integration of psychological and zoological approaches to the study of behavior.

Qualifications:

An interest in behavioral neuroscience, animal learning, and/or animal behavior and a willingness to learn. Background in learning, comparative psychology or biopsychology is helpful but not necessary.

Duties:

Students will participate in the conduct of experimental procedures and the collection and analysis of the data. Most of the experiments involve observational techniques. There will be a lab meeting once a week.

PSY 357 Undergraduate Research Projects (Spring 2004)
PSY 357 Course Requirements

Updated 27 October 2003
College of Liberal Arts at the University of Texas Austin
Report broken links, problems and outdated information
Privacy Statement