Examples of Cultural Transmission in the following topics:
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- Cultural transmission is the way a group of people within a society or culture tend to learn and pass on new information.
- While interacting with people from other cultures, an individual generally faces certain obstacles, which are caused by differences in cultural understanding between the two people in question.
- Cultural transmission is the way a group of people or animals within a society or culture tend to learn and pass on new information.
- Cultural learning is believed to be particularly important for humans.
- Analyze the importance of cultural transmission, particularly in terms of learning styles
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- Animal culture refers to cultural learning in non-human animals through socially transmitted behaviors.
- Animal culture refers to cultural learning in non-human animals through socially transmitted behaviors.
- This process, most agree, involves the social transmission of a novel behavior, both among peers and between generations.
- The acquisition and sharing of behaviors correlates directly to the existence of memes, which are defined as "units of cultural transmission" by the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins.
- Darwin was also the first to suggest what became known as 'social learning' in explaining the transmission of an adaptive behavior pattern throughout a population of honey bees.
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- Outlining the way culture is assessed, the pros and cons of multiculturalism and how culture is transmitted is central to management.
- Cultural assessment begins with awareness.
- Perceiving the varying different elements of culture and cultural differentiation, and identifying the way in which these differences impact our interactions allows for a comprehensive approach at integrating different cultures.
- Cultural transmission, or cultural learning, is the tendency of a society or culture to pass on new information and generate new norms.
- As a result, the transmission of culture can be expressed as an evolving system constantly being influenced and altered over time.
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- How do sociologists study culture?
- One approach to studying culture falls under the label 'cultural sociology', which combines the study of culture with cultural understandings of phenomena.
- Not surprisingly, cultural conflict is an optimal scenario for the exploration of culture and cultural interaction.
- First, he found a cultural border that presented cultural conflict.
- Additionally, Anderson observed both the transmission of culture from generation to generation (i.e., socialization, but also the self-representation that is provided by cultural expressions (clothing, behavior, etc).
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- The surface structure of virions can be observed by both scanning and transmission electron microscopy, whereas the internal structures of the virus can only be observed in images from a transmission electron microscope.
- In these transmission electron micrographs, (a) a virus is dwarfed by the bacterial cell it infects, while (b) these E. coli cells are dwarfed by cultured colon cells.
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- Since oral communication almost always involves the simultaneous transmission and receipt of a message, feedback from the audience is immediate.
- There is usually a gap of time and space between creation/transmission of a written message and its receipt.
- Cultures that display these immediacy behaviors are considered high-contact cultures.
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- After Casimir Davaine demonstrated the direct transmission of the anthrax bacillus between cows, Koch studied anthrax more closely.
- He invented methods to purify the bacillus from blood samples and grow pure cultures.
- Additionally, it must be absent in healthy organisms prepared and maintained in a pure culture capable of producing the original infection, even after several generations in culture retrievable from an inoculated animal and cultured again.
- Pure cultures of multicellular organisms are often more easily isolated by simply picking out a single individual to initiate a culture.
- This is a useful technique for pure culture of fungi, multicellular algae, and small metazoa.
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- The most important and frequent mode of transmission of nosocomial infections is by direct contact.
- The most important and frequent mode of transmission of nosocomial infections is by direct contact.
- Vector borne transmission occurs when vectors such as mosquitoes, flies, rats, and other vermin transmit microorganisms.
- Contact transmission is divided into two subgroups: direct-contact transmission and indirect-contact transmission.
- Differentiate between the various types of transmission: air-borne, common vehicle, vector borne, direct and indirect contact transmission
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- According to evolutionary medicine, optimal virulence increases with horizontal transmission (between non-relatives) and decreases with vertical transmission (from parent to child).
- This is because the fitness of the host is bound to the fitness in vertical transmission but is not so bound in horizontal transmission.The pathogen population can evolve once it is in the host .
- Short-sighted evolution hypothesis suggests that the traits that increase reproduction rate and transmission to a new host will rise to high frequency within the pathogen population.
- If the pathogen's virulence kills the host and interferes with its own transmission to a new host, virulence will be selected against.
- But as long as transmission continues despite the virulence, virulent pathogens will have the advantage.
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- ., testing is recommended for syphilis (by serology and darkfield microscopy) and HSV (culture, serology or PCR), and in cases of chancroid outbreaks or based on the medical history, for the presence of Haemophilus ducreyi.
- Syphilis, genital herpes and chancroid have all been associated with increasing the risk for HIV transmission.
- Quite often, therapy has to start before identification is complete in order to decrease the chances for transmission and to increase the probability of successful treatment.