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Author Timberlake, W. url  openurl
  Title (up) Animal Behavior: A Continuing Synthesis Type Journal Article
  Year 1993 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 44 Issue 1 Pages 675-706  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3537  
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Author Premack, D. url  openurl
  Title (up) Animal Cognition Type Journal Article
  Year 1983 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 34 Issue 1 Pages 351-362  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3535  
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Author Gallistel, C.R. url  doi
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  Title (up) Animal Cognition: The Representation of Space, Time and Number Type Journal Article
  Year 1989 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 40 Issue 1 Pages 155-189  
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  Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 2972  
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Author Spear, N.E.; Miller, J.S.; Jagielo, J.A. url  openurl
  Title (up) Animal Memory and Learning Type Journal Article
  Year 1990 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 41 Issue 1 Pages 169-211  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3538  
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Author Rescorla, R.A.; Holland, P.C. url  openurl
  Title (up) Behavioral Studies of Associative Learning in Animals Type Journal Article
  Year 1982 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 33 Issue 1 Pages 265-308  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3540  
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Author Penn, D.C.; Povinelli, D.J. doi  openurl
  Title (up) Causal Cognition in Human and Nonhuman Animals: A Comparative, Critical Review Type Journal Article
  Year 2007 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 58 Issue 1 Pages 97-118  
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  Abstract In this article, we review some of the most provocative experimental results to have emerged from comparative labs in the past few years, starting with research focusing on contingency learning and finishing with experiments exploring nonhuman animals' understanding of causal-logical relations. Although the theoretical explanation for these results is often inchoate, a clear pattern nevertheless emerges. The comparative evidence does not fit comfortably into either the traditional associationist or inferential alternatives that have dominated comparative debate for many decades now. Indeed, the similarities and differences between human and nonhuman causal cognition seem to be much more multifarious than these dichotomous alternatives allow.  
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  Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Penn2007 Serial 2974  
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Author Dickinson, A.; Mackintosh, N.J. url  openurl
  Title (up) Classical Conditioning in Animals Type Journal Article
  Year 1978 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 29 Issue 1 Pages 587-612  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3539  
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Author Dewsbury, D.A. url  openurl
  Title (up) Comparative Psychology, Ethology, and Animal Behavior Type Journal Article
  Year 1989 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 40 Issue 1 Pages 581-602  
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  Call Number refbase @ user @ Serial 3541  
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Author Boysen, S.T.; Himes, G.T. url  doi
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  Title (up) Current Issues And Emerging Theories In Animal Cognition Type Journal Article
  Year 1999 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 50 Issue 1 Pages 683-705  
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  Abstract Comparative cognition is an emerging interdisciplinary field with contributions from comparative psychology, cognitive/experimental and developmental psychology, animal learning, and ethology, and is poised to move toward greater understanding of animal and human information-processing, reasoning, memory, and the phylogenetic emergence of mind. This chapter highlights some current issues and discusses four areas within comparative cognition that are yielding new approaches and hypotheses for studying basic conceptual capacities in nonhuman species. These include studies of imitation, tool use, mirror self-recognition, and the potential for attribution of mental states by nonhuman animals. Though a very old question in psychology, the study of imitation continues to provide new avenues for examining the complex relationships among and between the levels of imitative behaviors exhibited by many species. Similarly, recent work in animal tool use, mirror self-recognition (with all its contentious issues), and recent attempts to empirically study the potential for attributional capacities in nonhumans, all continue to provide fresh insights and novel paradigms for addressing the defining characteristics of these complex phenomena.  
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  Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Boysen1999 Serial 2973  
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Author de Waal, F.B.M. url  doi
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  Title (up) Putting the Altruism Back into Altruism: The Evolution of Empathy Type Journal Article
  Year 2008 Publication Annual Review of Psychology Abbreviated Journal Annu Rev Psychol  
  Volume 59 Issue 1 Pages 279-300  
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  Abstract Evolutionary theory postulates that altruistic behavior evolved for the return-benefits it bears the performer. For return-benefits to play a motivational role, however, they need to be experienced by the organism. Motivational analyses should restrict themselves, therefore, to the altruistic impulse and its knowable consequences. Empathy is an ideal candidate mechanism to underlie so-called directed altruism, i.e., altruism in response to anothers's pain, need, or distress. Evidence is accumulating that this mechanism is phylogenetically ancient, probably as old as mammals and birds. Perception of the emotional state of another automatically activates shared representations causing a matching emotional state in the observer. With increasing cognition, state-matching evolved into more complex forms, including concern for the other and perspective-taking. Empathy-induced altruism derives its strength from the emotional stake it offers the self in the other's welfare. The dynamics of the empathy mechanism agree with predictions from kin selection and reciprocal altruism theory.  
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  Notes doi: 10.1146/annurev.psych.59.103006.093625 Approved no  
  Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 5058  
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