Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. In the study of the biological sciences, biocommunication is any specific type of communication within (intraspecific) or between (interspecific) species of plants, animals, fungi, protozoa and microorganisms.

  3. Jan 18, 2008 · Communication is ubiquitous in biology, and agreement on terms essential for scientific progress. Yet there is no agreed definition of biological communication. Definitions couched in terms of adaptation are often used, but there is significant variability in exactly which criteria are invoked.

    • T. C. Scott-Phillips
    • 2008
  4. Yet there is no agreed definition of biological communication. Definitions couched in terms of adaptation are often used, but there is significant variability in exactly which criteria are invoked. An alternative is to define communication in terms of information transfer.

    • of Evolutionary Biology
    • 21
    • 387-395
  5. Communication is ubiquitous in biology, and agreement on terms essential for scientific progress. Yet there is no agreed definition of biological communication. Definitions couched in terms of adaptation are often used, but there is significant variability in exactly which criteria are invoked.

  6. The ability of cells to communicate through chemical signals originated in single cells and was essential for the evolution of multicellular organisms. The efficient and error-free function of communication systems is vital for all life as we know it.

  7. Mar 10, 2016 · Our special issue this year focuses on communication, a critical component of all biological systems, ranging from molecular crosstalk to how we interact with one another.

  8. Apr 8, 2016 · The biocommunicative approach investigates both communication processes within and among cells, tissues, organs and organisms as sign-mediated interactions and nucleotide sequences as code, i.e., language-like text, which follows in parallel 3 kinds of rules: combinatorial (syntactic), context-sensitive (pragmatic) and content-specific (semantic).

  1. People also search for