Examples of imprinting in the following topics:
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- Simple learned behaviors include habituation and imprinting, both of which are important to the maturation process of young animals.
- Simple learned behaviors include habituation and imprinting, both of which are important to the maturation process of young animals.
- Imprinting is a type of learning that occurs at a particular age or a life stage that is rapid and independent of the species involved.
- However, if newborn ducks see a human before they see their mother, they will imprint on the human and follow it in just the same manner as they would follow their real mother.
- The attachment of ducklings to their mother is an example of imprinting.
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- Simple learned behaviors include habituation and imprinting—both are important to the maturation process of young animals.
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- A few early Cretaceous rocks show clear imprints of leaves resembling angiosperm leaves.
- This leaf imprint shows a Ficus speciosissima, an angiosperm that flourished during the Cretaceous period.
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- Imprints of Cooksonia show slender, branching stems ending in what appear to be sporangia.
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- This can leave behind a dark imprint of the fossil.