List View
 |   | 
   web
Author Title Year Publication Serial Volume Pages (up)
Whiten, A.; Horner, V.; Litchfield, C.A.; Marshall-Pescini, S. How do apes ape? 2004 Learning & Behavior 734 32 36-52
Whiten, A.; Boesch, C. The cultures of chimpanzees 2001 Scientific American 740 284 60-67
Schwartz, B.L.; Evans, S. Episodic memory in primates 2001 American journal of primatology 4115 55 71-85
de Waal, F.B. Bonobo sex and society 1995 Scientific American 206 272 82-88
Parish, A.R.; De Waal, F.B. The other “closest living relative”. How bonobos (Pan paniscus) challenge traditional assumptions about females, dominance, intra- and intersexual interactions, and hominid evolution 2000 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 189 907 97-113
Galdikas, B.M. Orangutan tool use 1989 Science (New York, N.Y.) 2847 243 152
Mulcahy, N.J.; Call, J. How great apes perform on a modified trap-tube task 2006 Animal Cognition 2469 9 193-199
Bering, J.M. A critical review of the “enculturation hypothesis”: the effects of human rearing on great ape social cognition 2004 Animal Cognition 2543 7 201-212
Tomasello, M.; Call, J. The role of humans in the cognitive development of apes revisited 2004 Animal Cognition 2517 7 213-215
Kaminski, J.; Call, J.; Tomasello, M. Body orientation and face orientation: two factors controlling apes' behavior from humans 2004 Animal Cognition 2538 7 216-223