TY - JOUR
T1 - Developmental perspectives on personality
T2 - Implications for ecological and evolutionary studies of individual differencese
AU - Stamps, Judy A.
AU - Groothuis, Ton G. G.
PY - 2010/12/27
Y1 - 2010/12/27
N2 - Developmental processes can have major impacts on the correlations in behaviour across contexts (contextual generality) and across time (temporal consistency) that are the hallmarks of animal personality. Personality can and does change: at any given age or life stage it is contingent upon a wide range of experiential factors that occurred earlier in life, from prior to conception through adulthood. We show how developmental reaction norms that describe the effects of prior experience on a given behaviour can be used to determine whether the effects of a given experience at a given age will affect contextual generality at a later age, and to illustrate how variation within individuals in developmental plasticity leads to variation in contextual generality across individuals as a function of experience. We also show why niche-picking and niche-construction, behavioural processes which allow individuals to affect their own developmental environment, can affect the contextual generality and the temporal consistency of personality. We conclude by discussing how an appreciation of developmental processes can alert behavioural ecologists studying animal personality to critical, untested assumptions that underlie their own research programmes, and outline situations in which a developmental perspective can improve studies of the functional significance and evolution of animal personality.
AB - Developmental processes can have major impacts on the correlations in behaviour across contexts (contextual generality) and across time (temporal consistency) that are the hallmarks of animal personality. Personality can and does change: at any given age or life stage it is contingent upon a wide range of experiential factors that occurred earlier in life, from prior to conception through adulthood. We show how developmental reaction norms that describe the effects of prior experience on a given behaviour can be used to determine whether the effects of a given experience at a given age will affect contextual generality at a later age, and to illustrate how variation within individuals in developmental plasticity leads to variation in contextual generality across individuals as a function of experience. We also show why niche-picking and niche-construction, behavioural processes which allow individuals to affect their own developmental environment, can affect the contextual generality and the temporal consistency of personality. We conclude by discussing how an appreciation of developmental processes can alert behavioural ecologists studying animal personality to critical, untested assumptions that underlie their own research programmes, and outline situations in which a developmental perspective can improve studies of the functional significance and evolution of animal personality.
KW - gene-environment correlations
KW - gene-environment interactions
KW - developmental plasticity
KW - differential consistency
KW - contextual reaction norms
KW - structural consistency
KW - STICKLEBACKS GASTEROSTEUS-ACULEATUS
KW - PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY
KW - BEHAVIORAL SYNDROMES
KW - ANIMAL PERSONALITY
KW - MATERNAL-CARE
KW - ENVIRONMENT CORRELATION
KW - HABITAT SELECTION
KW - WILD POPULATIONS
KW - NATAL DISPERSAL
KW - REACTION NORMS
U2 - 10.1098/rstb.2010.0218
DO - 10.1098/rstb.2010.0218
M3 - Review article
VL - 365
SP - 4029
EP - 4041
JO - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
JF - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
SN - 0962-8436
IS - 1560
ER -