What's the difference between ethnologist and ethologist?

Ethnologist


Definition:

  • (n.) One versed in ethnology; a student of ethnology.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Nott has been characterized as a physician, anatomist, anthropologist, and ethnologist.
  • (2) The migration of domesticated animals in Africa is of particular interest to the anthropologist and ethnologist in that it may provide valuable information concerning the migration of human tribes that accompanied these animals.
  • (3) I met with Åke Daun, Sweden's most venerable ethnologist.
  • (4) In fact, nearly all the negative views in the piece originated with the many local experts I interviewed during my years of research: the leading anthropologists, ethnologists, economists, politicians, academics and journalists.
  • (5) Traditional nutritional habits around 1910 were recorded during a survey by ethnologists in 1965.
  • (6) Proposal of analysis of the transfer in modern life of the primitive "obsession of the borders" described by ethnologists.

Ethologist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who studies or writes upon ethology.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Strong objections to certain features of this system have not only been raised by national and international societies for the prevention of cruelty to animals but also by ethologists.
  • (2) He avoids any details of interest about his first marriage – to the ethologist Marian Stamp.
  • (3) It is concluded that psychiatrists and ethologists should cooperate in the future evaluation of therapeutic measures including new drugs developed on the basis of ethological tests.
  • (4) The character of the movements have features of action patterns in the sense that the term is used by ethologists.
  • (5) Evolutionary psychiatry which sets present human pathological behaviour in the context of our species past evolution and of our ancestor's adaptations to their natural environment, leads the psychopathologist to revise certain of classic concepts in this field and resort to some of the concepts used by the ethologists, such as territory, hierarchy, allo-grooming and altruistic behaviour.
  • (6) A briefer curriculum is also suggested from the psychiatric literature for use by ethologists.
  • (7) Ethologists attempt to elucidate four interrelated aspects of a given behavior: its survival function, evolution, development, and elicitation by internal and external factors.
  • (8) Ethologists have traditionally conducted primarily observational studies designed to ascertain the evolutionary significance of behaviors in wild animals.
  • (9) Ethologists working with many species, studying overall behaviour, observing and experimenting in natural milieu, have first realized that animals are learning some things, sometimes complex, more easily than simple ones.
  • (10) A significant task for ethologists is the scientific elaboration of the animals' interactions with their surrounding, in their keeping system.
  • (11) Oversimplified assumptions about basic parasite biology, ambiguous formulation of the hypothesis, and poor communication between ethologists and parasitologists have hampered its testing.
  • (12) Pavlov, are compared with the "competence drive" and the "motivation of the resistance to coercion," respectively, described by contemporary ethologists.
  • (13) Taught by the history of biology, ethologists try to adhere as rigidly as possible to the method used in natural science.
  • (14) It is pointed out that this issue is closely related to the group selection debate among ethologists, i.e.
  • (15) Zimmermann and Kagelmann's statement that ethologists do not want to see the dangers inherent in the theory of inborn dispositions is vigorously repudiated.
  • (16) This article presents the results of ten years of theoretical study and practical applications, undertaken on behalf of the French Association for Information and Studies on Companion Animals (AFIRAC) by experts from many disciplines: doctors, veterinarians, ethologists, teachers, landscape gardeners, town planners and architects, in collaboration with those responsible for open spaces, roadways, urban cleaning, etc.
  • (17) The author's perspective is that of a naturalist and ethologist.

Words possibly related to "ethnologist"

Words possibly related to "ethologist"