Byrne, R. W. 2002. When cognitive psychology met Japanese primatology. Animal Cognition 5: 59-60.
Byrne, R. W. 2005. Animal evolution: Foxy friends. Current Biology 15: R86-R87.
Byrne, R. W. 2007. Ape society: trading favours. Current Biology 17: R775-R776.
Byrne, R. W. 2007. Culture in great apes: using intricate complexity in feeding skills to trace the evolutionary origin of human technical prowess. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 362: 577-585.
Byrne, R. W. 2009. Animal imitation. Current Biology 19: R111-R114.
Byrne, R. W. 2013. Animal curiosity. Current Biology 23: R469-R470.
Byrne, R. W. 2015. The what as well as the why of animal fun. Current Biology 25: R2-R4.
Byrne, R. W., Bates, L. A. 2007. Brain evolution: when is a group not a group?. Current Biology 17: R883-R884.
Byrne, R. W., Bates, L. A. 2011. Cognition in the wild: exploring animal minds with observational evidence. Biology Letters 7: 619-622.
Byrne, R. W., Cartmill, E., Genty, E., Graham, K. E., Hobaiter, C., Tanner, J. 2017. Great ape gestures: intentional communication with a rich set of innate signals. Animal Cognition 20: 755-769.
Byrne, R. W., Cartmill, E., Genty, E., Graham, K. E., Hobaiter, C., Tanner, J. 2019. Great ape gestures: intentional communication with a rich set of innate signals. Animal Cognition 22: 471-471.
Byrne, R. W., Corp, N., Byrne, J. M. 2001. Manual dexterity in the gorilla: bimanual and digit role differentiation in a natural task. Animal Cognition 4: 347-361.
Byrne, R. W., Rapaport, L. G. 2011. What are we learning from teaching?. Animal Behaviour 82: 1207-1211.
Byrne, R., Lee, P. C., Njiraini, N., Poole, J. H., Sayialel, K., Sayialel, S., Bates, L., Moss, C. J. 2008. Do elephants show empathy?. Journal of Consciousness Studies 15: 204-225.
Byrnit, J. T. 2009. Gorillas’ (Gorilla gorilla) use of experimenter-given manual and facial cues in an object-choice task. Animal Cognition 12: 401-404.
Byrom, N. C., Murphy, R. A. 2018. Individual differences are more than a gene× environment interaction: The role of learning. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition 44: 36.
Cacchione, T., Burkart, J. M. 2012. Dissociation between seeing and acting: insights from common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus). Behav Processes 89: 52-60.
Cacchione, T., Hrubesch, C., Call, J. 2013. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus) quantify split solid objects. Animal Cognition 16: 1-10.
Cachero, S., Ostrovsky, A. D., Yu, J. Y., Dickson, B. J., Jefferis, G. S. X. E. 2010. Sexual dimorphism in the fly brain. Current Biology 20: 1589-1601.
Cadieu, N., Cadieu, J. C. 2004. The influence of free interactions and partner familiarity on social transmission in the young canary. Animal Behaviour 67: 1051-1057.

<<First    < Previous    81 82 83 84 85 86 87     Next >    Last >>