Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? (42 page)

BOOK: Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?
3.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Babb, S. J., and J. D. Crystal. 2006. Episodic-like memory in the rat.
Current Biology
16:1317–21.

Ban, S. D., C. Boesch, and K. R. L. Janmaat. 2014. Taï chimpanzees anticipate revisiting high-valued fruit trees from further distances.
Animal Cognition
17:1353–64.

Barton, R. A. 2012. Embodied cognitive evolution and the cerebellum.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
367:2097–107.

Bates, L. A., et al. 2007. Elephants classify human ethnic groups by odor and garment color.
Current Biology
17:1938–42.

Baumeister, R. F. 2008. Free will in scientific psychology.
Perspectives on Psychological Science
3:14–19.

Beach, F. A. 1950. The snark was a boojum.
American Psychologist
5:115–24.

Beck, B. B. 1967. A study of problem-solving by gibbons.
Behaviour
28:95–109.

———. 1980.
Animal Tool Behavior: The Use and Manufacture of Tools by Animals.
New York: Garland STPM Press.

———. 1982. Chimpocentrism: Bias in cognitive ethology.
Journal of Human Evolution
11:3–17.

Bekoff, M., and C. Allen. 1997. Cognitive ethology: Slayers, skeptics, and proponents. In
Anthropomorphism, Anecdotes, and Animals: The Emperor’s New Clothes?
ed. R. W. Mitchell, N. Thompson, and L. Miles, 313–34. Albany: SUNY Press.

Bekoff, M., and P. W. Sherman. 2003. Reflections on animal selves.
Trends in Ecology and Evolution
19:176–80.

Bekoff, M., C. Allen, and G. M. Burghardt, eds. 2002.
The Cognitive Animal: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives on Animal Cognition.
Cambridge, MA: Bradford.

Beran, M. J. 2002. Maintenance of self-imposed delay of gratification by four chimpanzees (
Pan troglodytes
) and an orangutan (
Pongo p
ygmaeus
).
Journal of General Psychology
129:49–66.

———. 2015. The comparative science of “self-control”: What are we talking about?
Frontiers in Psychology
6:51.

Berns, G. S. 2013.
How Dogs Love Us: A Neuroscientist and His Adopted Dog Decode the Canine Brain.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Berns, G. S., A. Brooks, and M. Spivak. 2013. Replicability and heterogeneity of awake unrestrained canine fMRI responses.
Plos ONE
8:e81698.

Bird, C. D., and N. J. Emery. 2009. Rooks use stones to raise the water level to reach a floating worm.
Current Biology
19:1410–14.

Bischof-Köhler, D. 1991. The development of empathy in infants. In
Infant Development: Perspectives From German-Speaking Countries
, ed. M. Lamb and M. Keller, 245–73. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.

Bjorklund, D. F., J. M. Bering, and P. Ragan. 2000. A two-year longitudinal study of deferred imitation of object manipulation in a juvenile chimpanzee (
P
an troglodytes
) and orangutan (
Pongo pygmaeus
).
Developmental Psychobiology
37:229–37.

Boesch, C. 2007. What makes us human? The challenge of cognitive cross-species comparison.
Journal of Comparative Psychology
121:227–40.

Boesch, C., and H. Boesch-Achermann. 2000.
The Chimpanzees of the Taï Forest: Behavioural Ecology and Evolution.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Boesch, C., J. Head, and M. M. Robbins. 2009. Complex tool sets for honey extraction among chimpanzees in Loango National Park, Gabon.
Journal of Human Evolution
56:560–69.

Bolhuis, J. J., and C. D. L. Wynne. 2009. Can evolution explain how minds work?
Nature
458:832–33.

Bonnie, K. E., and F. B. M. de Waal. 2007. Copying without rewards: Socially influenced foraging decisions among brown capuchin monkeys.
Animal Cognition
10: 283–92.

Bonnie, K. E., V. Horner, A. Whiten, and F. B. M. de Waal. 2006. Spread of arbitrary conventions among chimpanzees: A controlled experiment.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B
274:367–72.

Bovet, D., and D. A. Washburn. 2003. Rhesus macaques categorize unknown conspecifics according to their dominance relations.
Journal of Comparative Psychology
117:400–5.

Boyd, R. 2006. The puzzle of human sociality.
Science
314:1555–56.

Boysen, S. T., and G. G. Berntson. 1989. Numerical competence in a chimpanzee (
Pan troglodytes
).
Journal of Comparative Psychology
103:23–31.

———. 1995. Responses to quantity: Perceptual versus cognitive mechanisms in chimpanzees (
Pan troglodytes
).
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes
21:82–86.

Bramlett, J. L., B. M. Perdue, T. A. Evans, and M. J. Beran. 2012. Capuchin monkeys (
Cebus apella
) let lesser rewards pass them by to get better rewards.
Animal Cognition
15:963–69.

Bräuer, J., et al. 2006. Making inferences about the location of hidden food: Social dog, causal ape.
Journal of Comparative Psychology
120: 38–47.

Bräuer, J., and J. Call. 2015. Apes produce tools for future use.
American Journal of Primatology
77:254–63.

Breland, K., and M. Breland. 1961. The misbehavior of organisms.
American Psychologist
16:681–84.

Breuer, T., M. Ndoundou-Hockemba, and V. Fishlock. 2005. First observation of tool use in wild gorillas.
Plos Biology
3:2041–43.

Brosnan, S. F., et al. 2010. Mechanisms underlying responses to inequitable outcomes in chimpanzees.
Animal Behaviour
79:1229–37.

Brosnan, S. F., and F. B. M. de Waal. 2003. Monkeys reject unequal pay.
Nature
425:297–99.

———. 2014. The evolution of responses to (un)fairness.
Science
346:1251776.

Brosnan, S. F., C. Freeman, and F. B. M. de Waal. 2006. Partner’s behavior, not reward distribution, determines success in an unequal cooperative task in capuchin monkeys.
American Journal of Primatology
68:713–24.

Brown, C., M. P. Garwood, and J. E. Williamson. 2012. It pays to cheat: Tactical deception in a cephalopod social signalling system.
Biology Letters
8:729–32.

Browning, R. 2006 [orig. 1896].
The Poetical Works.
Whitefish, MT: Kessinger.

Bruck, J. N. 2013. Decades-long social memory in bottlenose dolphins.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
280: 20131726.

Bshary, R., and R. Noë. 2003. Biological markets: The ubiquitous influence of partner choice on the dynamics of cleaner fish-client reef fish interactions. In
Genetic and Cultural Evolution of Cooperation
, ed. P. Hammerstein, 167–84. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Bshary, R., A. Hohner, K. Ait-El-Djoudi, and H. Fricke. 2006. Interspecific communicative and coordinated hunting between groupers and giant moray eels in the Red Sea.
Plos Biology
4:e431.

Buchsbaum, R., M. Buchsbaum, J. Pearse, and V. Pearse. 1987.
Animals Without Backbones: An Introduction to the Invertebrates.
3rd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Buckley, J., et al. 2010. Biparental mucus feeding: A unique example of parental care in an Amazonian cichlid.
Journal of Experimental Biology
213:3787–95.

Buckley, L. A., et al. 2011. Too hungry to learn? Hungry broiler breeders fail to learn a y-maze food quantity discrimination task.
Animal Welfare
20: 469–81.

Bugnyar, T., and B. Heinrich. 2005. Ravens,
Corvus corax
, differentiate between knowledgeable and ignorant competitors.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B
272:1641–46.

Burghardt, G. M. 1991. Cognitive ethology and critical anthropomorphism: A snake with two heads and hognose snakes that play dead. In
Cognitive Ethology: The Minds of Other Animals: Essays in Honor of Donald R. Griffin
, ed. C. A. Ristau, 53–90. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Burkhardt, R. W. 2005.
Patterns of Behavior: Konrad Lorenz, Niko Tinbergen, and the Founding of Ethology.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Burrows, A. M., et al. 2006. Muscles of facial expression in the chimpanzee (
Pan troglodytes
): Descriptive, ecological and phylogenetic contexts.
Journal of Anatomy
208:153–68.

Byrne, R. 1995.
The Thinking Ape: The Evolutionary Origins of Intelligence.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Byrne, R., and A. Whiten. 1988.
Machiavellian Intelligence.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Calcutt, S. E., et al. 2014. Captive chimpanzees share diminishing resources.
Behaviour
151:1967–82.

Caldwell, C. C., and A. Whiten. 2002. Evolutionary perspectives on imitation: Is a comparative psychology of social learning possible?
Animal Cognition
5:193–208.

Call, J. 2004. Inferences about the location of food in the great apes.
Journal of Comparative Psychology
118:232–41.

———. 2006. Descartes’ two errors: Reason and reflection in the great apes. In
Rational Animals
, ed. S. Hurley and M. Nudds, 219–234. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Call, J., and M. Carpenter. 2001. Do apes and children know what they have seen?
Animal Cognition
3:207–20.

Call, J., and M. Tomasello. 2008. Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind? 30 Years Later.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences
12:187–92.

Callaway, E. 2012. Alex the parrot’s last experiment shows his mathematical genius.
Nature News Blog
, Feb. 20, http://bit.ly/1eYgqoD.

Calvin, W. H. 1982. Did throwing stones shape hominid brain evolution?
Ethology and Sociobiology
3:115–24.

Candland, D. K. 1993.
Feral Children and Clever Animals: Reflections on Human Nature.
New York: Oxford University Press.

Cenami Spada, E., F. Aureli, P. Verbeek, and F. B. M. de Waal. 1995. The self as reference point: Can animals do without it? In
The Self in Infancy: Theory and Research
, ed. P. Rochat, 193–215. Amsterdam: Elsevier.

Chang, L., et al. 2015. Mirror-induced self-directed behaviors in rhesus monkeys after visual-somatosensory training.
Current Biology
25:212–17.

Cheney, D. L., and R. M. Seyfarth. 1986. The recognition of social alliances by vervet monkeys.
Animal Behaviour
34 (1986): 1722–31.

———. 1989. Redirected aggression and reconciliation among vervet monkeys,
Cercopithecus a
ethiops. Behaviour
110: 258–75.

———. 1990.
How Monkeys See the World: Inside the Mind of Another Species.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Claidière, N., et al. 2015. Selective and contagious prosocial resource donation in capuchin monkeys, chimpanzees and humans.
Scientific Reports
5:7631.

Clayton, N. S., and A. Dickinson. 1998. Episodic-like memory during cache recovery by scrub jays.
Nature
395:272–74.

Corballis, M. C. 2002.
From Hand to Mouth: The Origins of Language
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

———. 2013. Mental time travel: A case for evolutionary continuity.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences
17:5–6.

Corbey, R. 2005.
The Metaphysics of Apes: Negotiating the Animal-Human Boundary.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Correia, S. P. C., A. Dickinson, and N. S. Clayton. 2007. Western scrub-jays anticipate future needs independently of their current motivational state.
Current Biology
17:856–61.

Courage, K. H. 2013.
Octopus! The Most Mysterious Creature in the Sea.
New York: Current.

Crawford, M. 1937. The cooperative solving of problems by young chimpanzees.
Comparative Psychology Monographs
14:1–88.

Crockford, C., R. M. Wittig, R. Mundry, and K. Zuberbühler. 2012. Wild chimpanzees inform ignorant group members of danger.
Current Biology
22:142–46.

Csányi, V. 2000.
If Dogs Could Talk: Exploring the Canine Mind.
New York: North Point Press.

Cullen, E. 1957. Adaptations in the kittiwake to cliff-nesting.
Ibis
99:275–302.

Darwin, C. 1982 [orig. 1871].
The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Davila Ross, M., M. J. Owren, and E. Zimmermann. 2009. Reconstructing the evolution of laughter in great apes and humans.
Current Biology
19:1106–11.

de Groot, N. G., et al. 2010. AIDS-protective HLA-B*27/B*57 and chimpanzee MHC class I molecules target analogous conserved areas of HIV-1/SIVcpz.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
,
USA
107:15175–80.

de Waal, F. B. M. 1991. Complementary methods and convergent evidence in the study of primate social cognition.
Behaviour
118:297–320.

———. 1996.
Good Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and Other Animals.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

———. 1997.
Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape.
Berkeley: University of California Press.

———. 1999. Anthropomorphism and anthropodenial: Consistency in our thinking about humans and other animals.
Philosophical Topics
27:255–80.

———. 2000. Primates: A natural heritage of conflict resolution.
Science
289:586–90.

———. 2001.
The Ape and the Sushi Master: Cultural Reflections by a Primatologist.
New York: Basic Books.

———. 2003a. Darwin’s legacy and the study of primate visual communication. In
Emotions Inside Out: 130 Years After Darwin’s
“The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals,” ed. P. Ekman, J. J. Campos, R. J. Davidson, and F. B. M. de Waal, 7–31. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.

BOOK: Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?
3.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

To Catch a Copperhead by Pro Se Press
The Garden of Evil by David Hewson
Deepwoods (Book 1) by Honor Raconteur
Best Of Everything by R.E. Blake, Russell Blake
What You Wish For by Mark Edwards
Hard to Hold by Karen Foley
In Too Deep by Jennifer Banash
Here Comes a Chopper by Gladys Mitchell