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Author Title Year Publication Serial Volume Pages (down)
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
de Waal, F.B. The end of nature versus nurture 1999 Scientific American 192 281 94-99
Zhang, T.-Y.; Parent, C.; Weaver, I.; Meaney, M.J. Maternal programming of individual differences in defensive responses in the rat 2004 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 4132 1032 85-103
de Waal, F.B. Bonobo sex and society 1995 Scientific American 206 272 82-88
Potts, R. Variability selection in hominid evolution 1998 Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 5461 7 81-96
Matsumura, S.; Kobayashi, T. A game model for dominance relations among group-living animals 1998 Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 5102 42 77-84
Amdam, G.V.; Csondes, A.; Fondrk, M.K.; Page, R.E.J. Complex social behaviour derived from maternal reproductive traits 2006 Nature 531 439 76-78
Parker, S.T. A general model for the adaptive function of self-knowledge in animals and humans 1997 Consciousness and Cognition 4160 6 75-86
Boyd, R.; Richerson, P.J. Why Culture is Common, but Cultural Evolution is Rare 1996 Proceedings of the British Academy 4195 88 73-93
Van Schaik, C. Why are some animals so smart? 2006 Scientific American 2830 294 64-71