|
Author |
Title |
Year |
Publication |
Serial |
Volume |
Pages |
Links |
|
Burke, D.; Cieplucha, C.; Cass, J.; Russell, F.; Fry, G. |
Win-shift and win-stay learning in the short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) |
2002 |
Animal Cognition |
2605 |
5 |
79-84 |
|
|
Genty, E.; Byrne, R. |
Why do gorillas make sequences of gestures? |
2010 |
Animal Cognition |
5114 |
13 |
287-301 |
|
|
Stevens, J.R.; Wood, J.N.; Hauser, M.D. |
When quantity trumps number: discrimination experiments in cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) and common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) |
2007 |
Animal Cognition |
2414 |
|
|
|
|
Byrne, R. |
When cognitive psychology met Japanese primatology |
2002 |
Animal Cognition |
3180 |
5 |
59-60 |
|
|
Janson, C.; Byrne, R. |
What wild primates know about resources: opening up the black box |
2007 |
Animal Cognition |
4214 |
10 |
357-367 |
|
|
Lonsdorf, E.V. |
What is the role of mothers in the acquisition of termite-fishing behaviors in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii)? |
2006 |
Animal Cognition |
2480 |
9 |
36-46 |
|
|
Giljov, A.; Malashichev, Y.; Karenina, K. |
What do wild saiga antelopes tell us about the relative roles of the two brain hemispheres in social interactions? |
2019 |
Animal Cognition |
6569 |
|
|
|
|
Emery, N.J.; Dally, J.M.; Clayton, N.S. |
Western scrub-jays ( Aphelocoma californica) use cognitive strategies to protect their caches from thieving conspecifics |
2004 |
Animal Cognition |
2566 |
7 |
37-43 |
|
|
Jordan, K.E.; Brannon, E.M. |
Weber's Law influences numerical representations in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) |
2006 |
Animal Cognition |
2471 |
9 |
159-172 |
|
|
Ottoni, E.B.; de Resende, B.D.; Izar, P. |
Watching the best nutcrackers: what capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) know about others' tool-using skills |
2005 |
Animal cognition |
355 |
8 |
215-219 |
|