Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Comparative Cognition (Revised)

Oxford Handbook of Comparative Cognition (Revised)

291,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.03.2012

Herausgeber

Wasserman Edward A. + weitere

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

942

Maße (L/B/H)

26/18,3/5,4 cm

Gewicht

1814 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-539266-1

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.03.2012

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

942

Maße (L/B/H)

26/18,3/5,4 cm

Gewicht

1814 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-539266-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Comparative Cognition (Revised)
    • Contents

    • 1. Introduction to the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Cognition

    • Edward A. Wasserman and Thomas R. Zentall

    • I. Perception and Illusion

    • 2. Grouping and Segmentation in human and nonhuman primates

    • JoÃ'l Fagot, Isabelle Barbet, and Carole Parron

    • 3. Seeing What Is Not There: Illusion, Completion, and Spatiotemporal Boundary Formation in Comparative Perspective

    • Kazuo Fujita

    • 4. The Cognitive Chicken: Visual and Spatial Cognition in a Nonmammalian Brain

    • Giorgio Vallortigara

    • 5. New Perspectives on Absolute Pitch in Birds and Mammals

    • Ronald G. Weisman, Douglas J. K. Mewhort, Marisa Hoeschele, and Christopher B. Sturdy

    • II. Attention and Search

    • 6. Reaction-time Explorations of Visual Perception, Attention, and Decision in Pigeons

    • Donald S. Blough

    • 7. The Competition for Attention in Humans and Other Animals

    • David A. Washburn and Lauren A. Taglialatela

    • 8. Establishing frames of reference for finding hidden goals: The use of multiple spatial cues by nonhuman animals and people

    • Brett Gibson

    • III. Learning and Causation

    • 9. Contemporary thought on the environmental cues that affect causal attribution

    • Michael E. Young

    • 10. Associative Accounts of Causality Judgments

    • Martha Escobar and Ralph R. Miller

    • 11. Rational Rats: Causal Inference and Representation

    • Aaron P. Blaisdell and Michael R. Waldmann

    • 12. Contrast: A More Parsimonious Account of Cognitive Dissonance Effects

    • Thomas R. Zentall, Rebecca A. Singer, Tricia S. Clement, Andrea M. Friedrich, and Jerome Alessandri

    • IV. Memory Processes

    • 13. Methodological Issues in Comparative Memory Research

    • Thomas R. Zentall

    • 14. Memory Processing

    • Anthony A. Wright

    • 15. The Questions of Temporal and Spatial Displacement in Animal Cognition

    • William A. Roberts

    • 16. Animal Metacognition

    • J. David Smith, Michael J. Beran, and Justin J. Couchman

    • 17. A comparative analysis of episodic memory: Cognitive mechanisms and neural substrates

    • H. Eichenbaum, Magdalena Sauvage, Norbert Fortin, Jonathan Robitsek, and Robert Komorowski

    • 18. Spatial, Temporal, and Associative Behavioral Functions Associated with Different Subregions of the Hippocampus

    • Raymond P. Kesner, Andrea M. Morris, and Christy S.S. Weeden

    • V. Spatial Cognition

    • 19. Arthropod Navigation: Ants, Bees, Crabs, Spiders Finding Their Way

    • Ken Cheng

    • 20. Comparative Spatial Cognition: Encoding of Geometric Information from Surfaces and Landmark Arrays.

    • Debbie M. Kelly and Marcia L. Spetch

    • 21. Corvid Caching: The Role of Cognition

    • S. R. De Kort, N. J. Emery, and N. S. Clayton

    • VI. Timing and Counting

    • 22. Behavioristic, Cognitive, Biological, and Quantitative Explanations of Timing

    • Russell M. Church

    • 23. Sensitivity to Time: Implications for the Representation of Time

    • Jonathon D. Crystal

    • 24. Comparative cognition of number representation

    • Dustin J. Merritt, Nicholas K. DeWind, and Elizabeth M. Brannon

    • 25. Similarities Between Temporal and Numerosity Discriminations

    • J. Gregor Fetterman

    • VII. Categorization and Concept Learning

    • 26. A modified feature theory as an account of pigeon visual categorization

    • Ludwig Huber and Ulrike Aust

    • 27. Artificial Categories and Prototype Effects in Animals

    • Masako Jitsumori

    • 28. Relational Discrimination Learning in Pigeons

    • Robert G. Cook and Edward A. Wasserman

    • 29. Similarity and Difference in the Conceptual Systems of Primates: The Unobservability Hypothesis

    • Jennifer Vonk and Daniel J. Povinelli

    • VIII. Pattern Learning

    • 30. Spatial Patterns: Behavioral Control and Cognitive Representation

    • Michael F. Brown

    • 31. The Organization of Sequential Behavior: Conditioning, Memory, and Abstraction

    • Stephen B. Fountain, James D. Rowan, Melissa D. Muller, Shannon M. A. Kundey, Laura R. G. Pickens, and Karen E. Doyle

    • 32. The Comparative Psychology of Ordinal Knowledge

    • Herbert Terrace

    • 33. Truly Random Operant Responding: Results and Reasons

    • Greg Jensen, Claire Miller, and Allen Neuringer

    • 34. From Momentary Maximizing to Serial Response Times and Artificial Grammar Learning

    • Charles P. Shimp, Walter Herbranson, and Thane Fremouw

    • IX. Problem Solving, Behavioral Flexibility, and Tool Use

    • 35. Intelligences and Brains: An Evolutionary Bird's Eye View

    • Juan D. Delius and Julia A. M. Delius

    • 36. Transitive inference in nonhuman animals

    • Olga F. Lazareva

    • 37. Dolphin Problem Solving

    • Stan A. Kuczaj II and Rachel T. Walker

    • 38. "What " and "Where " Analysis and Flexibility in Avian Visual Cognition

    • Shigeru Watanabe

    • X. Social Cognition Processes

    • 39. Social Learning in Rats: Historical Context and Experimental Findings

    • Bennett G. Galef

    • 40. What Is Challenging About Tool Use? The Capuchin's Perspective

    • Elisabetta Visalberghi and Dorothy Fragaszy

    • 41. Inter-species social learning in dogs: The inextricable roles of phylogeny and ontogeny

    • Monique A. R. Udell, Nicole R. Dorey, Clive D. L. Wynne

    • 42. Social learning: strategies, mechanisms and models

    • Kevin N. Laland, Lewis Dean, Will Hoppitt, Luke Rendell and Mike M. Webster

    • 43. Chimpanzee Social Cognition in Early Life: Comparative-Developmental Perspective

    • Masaki Tomonaga, Masako Myowa-Yamakoshi, Yuu Mizuno, Sanae Okamoto, Masami K. Yamaguchi, Daisuke Kosugi, Kim A. Bard, Masayuki Tanaka, Tetsuro Matsuzawa

    • 44. Social Learning and Culture in Primates: Evidence from Free-Ranging and Captive Populations

    • Elizabeth E. Price and Andrew Whiten

    • Epilogue:

    • 45. Postscript: An Essay on the Study of Cognition in Animals

    • Stewart H. Hulse

    • Index