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Dive into the research topics where Martin Daly is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Daly.


Behavioral Biology | 1978

Seasonally variable effects of conspecific odors upon capture of deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus gambelii)

Martin Daly; Margo I. Wilson; Steven F. Faux

Traps were set in triplets of one male-scented (M), one female-scented (F), and one neutral (N) trap. Bedding from laboratory-caged, adult deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus gambelii) was the source of M and F odors. In winter, outside the breeding season, deer mice, pocket mice, and kangaroo rats all avoided deer mouse odors and preferentially entered N traps. In spring, when breeding had commenced, deer mice preferentially entered scented traps, and avoidance of deer mouse odors by other species was reduced. These changes are interpreted as reflecting seasonally variable strategies of social confrontation.


Archive | 2000

Activity Patterns of Kangaroo Rats — Granivores in a Desert Habitat

Martin Daly; Philip R. Behrends; Margo Wilson

Kangaroo rats (Dipodomys, Heteromyidae) are nocturnal, facultatively bipedal, burrow-dwelling rodents, inhabiting arid and grassy habitats in western North America (Genoways and Brown 1993). The family Heteromyidae consists of six genera, of which pocket mice (Chaetodipus and Perognathus) and kangaroo mice (Microdipodops) are sympatric with kangaroo rats in deserts, and are to some degree their competitors. The approximately 20 Dipodomys species (Williams etal. 1993) are very similar in appearance, but vary about fourfold in body mass from the smallest species (D. merriami and D. nitratoides) to the largest (D. ingens). Notable features of all kangaroo rats include large hind feet (which they use for rapid, bipedal, saltatory locomotion), tail substantially longer than the body, and large heads housing enormous tympanic bullae.


Archive | 2002

Tödliche interpersonelle Gewalt aus Sicht der Evolutionspsychologie

Martin Daly; Margo Wilson

In der wissenschaftlichen Beschaftigung mit gewalttatigen Handlungen von Menschen versucht der evolutionspsychologische Ansatz, ein Modell zu entwickeln, das Vorhersagen daruber ermoglicht, welche Personen unter welchen Umstanden zur Gewalttatigkeit neigen werden und gegen wen sich die Gewalt wahrscheinlich richten wird. Dies geschieht im Rahmen eines allgemeinen theoretischen Modells jener Evolutionsprozesse, die an der Ausformung der menschlichen Psyche und des von ihr bestimmten Verhaltens mitgewirkt haben. Ein solcher Ansatz erfordert einen leidenschaftslosen Blick - und zwar in dem Sinne, dass wir die Gewalt, die im Mittelpunkt unseres Interesses steht, nicht vorschnell als pathologisch verurteilen durfen. Gewalt mag in vielen Fallen pathologisch sein - und in solchen Fallen konnen therapeutische Masnahmen moglicherweise Abhilfe schaffendoch oftmals lasst sich Gewalt besser als eine durch Adaption geformte Hervorbringung einer gesunden Psyche verstehen. In solchen Fallen besteht die geeignete Abhilfe in einer Verbesserung der sozialen und materiellen Umstande, die zu dem gewalttatigen Verhalten gefuhrt haben.


Archive | 2001

Income inequality and homicide rates in Canada and the United States

Martin Daly; Margo Wilson


Archive | 1995

Discriminative parental solicitude and the relevance of evolutionary models to the analysis of motivational systems

Martin Daly; Margo Wilson


Archive | 2002

Lethal and Nonlethal Violence Against Wives and the Evolutionary Psychology of Male Sexual Proprietariness

Margo Wilson; Martin Daly


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 1980

Factors affecting Rodents' responses to odours of strangers encountered in the field: Experiments with odour-baited traps

Martin Daly; Margo I. Wilson; Philip Behrends


Archive | 1978

Sex, evolution, and behavior : adaptations for reproduction

Martin Daly; Margo Wilson


Archive | 1996

Evolutionary Psychology and Marital Conflict: The Relevance of Stepchildren

Martin Daly; Margo Wilson


Archive | 2009

11 Coercive Violence by Human Males against Their Female Partners

Margo Wilson; Martin Daly

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Steven F. Faux

University of California

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Roger Keller Celeste

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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