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  2. psychology.iresearchnet.com › group › territorialityTerritoriality - iResearchNet

    Territoriality Definition. Territoriality is a pattern of attitudes and behavior held by a person or group that is based on perceived, attempted, or actual control of a physical space, object, or idea, which may involve habitual occupation, defense, personalization, and marking of the territory.

  3. Territoriality is a form of behavior in which one or more individuals actively defend a home range against other members of their own species. Others have listed the causes of territoriality as an expression of site attachment, aggression, and sexual behavior (Alcock, 2001; Ardrey, 1966; Beebe et al., 2008; Malmberg, 1980 ).

  4. Jan 1, 2022 · Territoriality refers to maintenance of a territory and thus includes territorial behavior, at the individual level, and spatial patterns that result from those individual interactions, at the population level (Hinsch and Komdeur 2017).

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  5. Territorial behavior is a key way of regulating privacy and communicating identity. Territorial behavior is essential for organizing social life. Source:...

  6. Territoriality. Book Comparative Psychology. Edition 1st Edition. First Published 1998. Imprint Routledge. Pages 10. eBook ISBN 9780203826492. ABSTRACT. Over 50 years ago, Noble (1939) defined a ter­ ritory as “any defended area.”

  7. Apr 29, 2013 · Psychology Definition of TERRITORIALITY: noun. 1. an animal's defending of a particular geographic region from intrusion by other members of the identical.

  8. Territoriality is a multifaceted concept, often misunderstood as merely the assertion of physical space. It extends to the psychological realm, encompassing the attitudes and behaviors associated with the desire to control and defend a space, object, or idea.

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