Showing results for imprinting.
Search instead for
Rip+Printing.
imprinting
American
[im-prin-ting]/ ɪmˈprɪn tɪŋ /
noun
Animal Behavior, Psychology.
rapid learning that occurs during a brief receptive period, typically soon after birth or hatching, and establishes a long-lasting behavioral response to a specific individual or object, as attachment to parent, offspring, or site.
imprinting
British
/ ɪmˈprɪntɪŋ /
noun
the development through exceptionally fast learning in young animals of recognition of and attraction to members of their own species or to surrogates
A rapid learning process by which a newborn or very young animal establishes a behavior pattern of recognition and attraction towards other animals of its own kind, as well as to specific individuals of its species, such as its parents, or to a substitute for these. Ducklings, for example, will imprint upon and follow the first large moving object they observe. In nature, this is usually their mother, but they can be made to imprint upon other moving objects, such as a soccer ball.