Animal Psychology and Behavioral Adaptation: Understanding Cognition Beyond Humans
You’ve ever watched an animal for more than a few minutes, not just glanced at it, but actually paid attention, and you start to notice something subtle. It doesn’t feel as simple as we usually assume. At first, everything looks predictable. A dog waits near the gate when it hears a bike. A crow lands near the same spot every day. A stray cat slowly figures out which people are safe. It’s easy to say, “That’s just instinct,” but the longer you watch, the less that explanation feels complete because the behavior isn’t exactly the same every time. It shifts. It adjusts. It reacts differently depending on what just happened, and that’s where it gets interesting. Animals don’t start from zero. They’re born with certain built-in tendencies. A bird doesn’t need lessons to start building a nest. A predator doesn’t need to be taught to chase movement. That part is already there, but what happens after that isn’t fixed. The environment starts shaping everything. And most of that shaping happens...