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

    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. 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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  4. 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 ).

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

  6. Over 50 years ago, Noble (1939) defined a ter­ ritory as “any defended area.” This deceptively simple definition has stood the test of time, because it incorporates three of the key elements in any territorial system.

  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 encompasses attitudes and behaviors related to the control and defense of a definable space, object, or idea. It includes habits such as habitual occupation, defense, personalization, and marking.

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