| Baker, Myron Charles, and Michael A. Cunningham, "The Biology of Bird-Song Dialects," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (1985), 85--133. |
....framework. In this case, the evolutionary principle of interest is the propensity for animals to choose mates from neighboring groups, but not from their own immediate families. A well studied example of this is the desire for song birds to select partners with similar, but not identical songs[1]. In this manner, they hope to avoid mating with family members, but at the same time increase their chances of procreating with their fittest neighbors. Because this principle serves in biological systems to increase species fitness, we hope that it will provide a sound strategy for computational ....
Baker, Myron Charles, and Michael A. Cunningham, "The Biology of Bird-Song Dialects," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (1985), 85--133.
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