|
Author |
Title |
Year |
Publication |
Serial |
Volume |
Pages |
Links |
|
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 |
|