New Caledonian crows reason about hidden causal agents

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New Caledonian crows reason about hidden causal agents is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P819ADS bibcode2012PNAS..10916389T
P356DOI10.1073/PNAS.1208724109
P932PMC publication ID3479607
P698PubMed publication ID22988112
P5875ResearchGate publication ID230871903

P50authorRussell GrayQ7381529
P2093author name stringAlex H Taylor
Rachael Miller
P2860cites workHabituation revisited: an updated and revised description of the behavioral characteristics of habituationQ24644850
Do new caledonian crows solve physical problems through causal reasoning?Q24653662
New Caledonian crows learn the functional properties of novel tool typesQ27314898
Lack of comprehension of cause-effect relations in tool-using capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella)Q28252831
Religion's evolutionary landscape: counterintuition, commitment, compassion, communionQ28263076
Shaping of hooks in New Caledonian crowsQ34143677
Habituation: A model phenomenon for the study of neuronal substrates of behaviorQ34231070
Spontaneous metatool use by New Caledonian crows.Q34663851
Darwin's mistake: explaining the discontinuity between human and nonhuman mindsQ34778578
Context-dependent tool use in New Caledonian crows.Q35814518
Causal cognition in human and nonhuman animals: a comparative, critical reviewQ36618261
Causal belief and the origins of technologyQ47379241
New Caledonian crows use tools for non-foraging activitiesQ48164203
Knowing who dunnit: Infants identify the causal agent in an unseen causal interactionQ48320459
Complex cognition and behavioural innovation in New Caledonian crows.Q51910086
Probing the limits of tool competence: experiments with two non-tool-using species (Cercopithecus aethiops and Saguinus oedipus).Q52031887
The crafting of hook tools by wild New Caledonian crows.Q52090241
Manufacture and use of hook-tools by New Caledonian crowsQ55893463
Morphology and sexual dimorphism of the New Caledonian Crow Corvus moneduloides, with notes on its behaviour and ecologyQ56169403
Secret agents: inferences about hidden causes by 10- and 12-month-old infantsQ81543833
P433issue40
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P1104number of pages3
P304page(s)16389-16391
P577publication date2012-09-17
P1433published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of AmericaQ1146531
P1476titleNew Caledonian crows reason about hidden causal agents
P478volume109

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cites work (P2860)
Q28596794Birds have primate-like numbers of neurons in the forebrain
Q28649622Building a bridge-an archeologist's perspective on the evolution of causal cognition
Q43140961Clever crows or unbalanced birds?
Q30631543Coding principles of the canonical cortical microcircuit in the avian brain
Q43042561Do crows reason about causes or agents? The devil is in the controls
Q30368419Eurasian jays do not copy the choices of conspecifics, but they do show evidence of stimulus enhancement.
Q38194057Genes, evolution and intelligence
Q36983655Large-scale network organization in the avian forebrain: a connectivity matrix and theoretical analysis
Q27318274Modifications to the Aesop's Fable paradigm change New Caledonian crow performances
Q92671637Multimorbidity among elderly in Bangladesh
Q98286265New Caledonian crows afford invaluable comparative insights into human cumulative technological culture
Q64234176New Caledonian crows infer the weight of objects from observing their movements in a breeze
Q27302318New Caledonian crows rapidly solve a collaborative problem without cooperative cognition
Q58885509Of babies and birds: complex tool behaviours are not sufficient for the evolution of the ability to create a novel causal intervention
Q36218734Performance in Object-Choice Aesop's Fable Tasks Are Influenced by Object Biases in New Caledonian Crows but not in Human Children
Q36605430Probing the Cultural Constitution of Causal Cognition - A Research Program
Q37290866Reasoning about "Capability": Wild Robins Respond to Limb Visibility in Humans
Q43043525Reply to Boogert et al.: The devil is unlikely to be in association or distraction.
Q43140784Reply to Dymond et al.: Clear evidence of habituation counters counterbalancing
Q46931294Representation of different exact numbers of prey by a spider-eating predator.
Q38651302The Functioning of a Cortex without Layers
Q98286275The crow in the room: New Caledonian crows offer insight into the necessary and sufficient conditions for cumulative cultural evolution
Q30833865The development of support intuitions and object causality in juvenile Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius).
Q27313213Using the Aesop's fable paradigm to investigate causal understanding of water displacement by New Caledonian crows

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