scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Elisa Bandini | Q92007814 |
P2093 | author name string | Claudio Tennie | |
P2860 | cites work | Do woodpecker finches acquire tool-use by social learning? | Q24522460 |
Young children spontaneously invent wild great apes' tool-use behaviours | Q27325509 | ||
Untrained chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) fail to imitate novel actions | Q27331562 | ||
Wild monkeys flake stone tools | Q27472690 | ||
The conditions for tool use in primates: implications for the evolution of material culture | Q28144196 | ||
Wild capuchin monkeys (Cebus libidinosus) use anvils and stone pounding tools | Q28296692 | ||
An evaluation of the efficacy of video displays for use with chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) | Q28661689 | ||
Cultures in chimpanzees | Q29618275 | ||
Young children copy cumulative technological design in the absence of action information. | Q29994699 | ||
Spontaneous Tool Use by Wild Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus libidinosus) in the Cerrado | Q29997840 | ||
Social intelligence, innovation, and enhanced brain size in primates | Q30085669 | ||
Two-year-old children copy more reliably and more often than nonhuman great apes in multiple observational learning tasks | Q33349556 | ||
Skill mastery inhibits adoption of observed alternative solutions among chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). | Q33365950 | ||
Long-tailed macaques select mass of stone tools according to food type | Q33635898 | ||
Memory, transmission and persistence of alternative foraging techniques in wild common marmosets | Q33710709 | ||
Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture | Q33831620 | ||
Tool use and tool making in wild chimpanzees | Q34185343 | ||
Marine prey processed with stone tools by Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea) in intertidal habitats | Q34304308 | ||
How do apes ape? | Q34322748 | ||
Stone-tool usage by Thai long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis). | Q34587464 | ||
The physical characteristics and usage patterns of stone axe and pounding hammers used by long-tailed macaques in the Andaman Sea region of Thailand | Q34978532 | ||
Community-specific evaluation of tool affordances in wild chimpanzees | Q35551578 | ||
The spread of a novel behavior in wild chimpanzees: New insights into the ape cultural mind | Q35812059 | ||
Travel fosters tool use in wild chimpanzees | Q37149932 | ||
'Ghost' experiments and the dissection of social learning in humans and animals | Q37686553 | ||
What's social about social learning? | Q37927050 | ||
Analysis of sea almond (Terminalia catappa) cracking sites used by wild Burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea). | Q39038211 | ||
Social learning in animals: categories and mechanisms | Q40685153 | ||
Social learning in otters | Q41580693 | ||
Spontaneous reoccurrence of "scooping", a wild tool-use behaviour, in naïve chimpanzees | Q41690022 | ||
Food washing and placer mining in captive great apes | Q46233360 | ||
Technological Response of Wild Macaques (Macaca fascicularis) to Anthropogenic Change | Q46278085 | ||
From play to proficiency: The ontogeny of stone-tool use in coastal-foraging long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) from a comparative perception-action perspective | Q46401579 | ||
An experimental study of nettle feeding in captive gorillas | Q46606868 | ||
Cultural innovation and transmission of tool use in wild chimpanzees: evidence from field experiments | Q46763905 | ||
Food cleaning in gorillas: Social learning is a possibility but not a necessity. | Q47150017 | ||
A model for tool-use traditions in primates: implications for the coevolution of culture and cognition | Q47390565 | ||
Social learning mechanisms and cumulative cultural evolution. Is imitation necessary? | Q47429959 | ||
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and the question of cumulative culture: an experimental approach | Q47719408 | ||
Morphological characteristics and genetic diversity of Burmese long-tailed Macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea). | Q47882757 | ||
Sex differences in the stone tool-use behavior of a wild population of burmese long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis aurea). | Q48594977 | ||
Long-tailed macaques use human hair as dental floss. | Q51080654 | ||
Behavioural ecology: tool manufacture by naive juvenile crows. | Q51192580 | ||
Modeling imitation and emulation in constrained search spaces. | Q51890525 | ||
How to crack nuts: acquisition process in captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) observing a model. | Q51926987 | ||
Observational learning in chimpanzees and children studied through 'ghost' conditions. | Q51967666 | ||
P433 | issue | 5 | |
P921 | main subject | Macaca fascicularis fascicularis | Q20903195 |
P304 | page(s) | 171826 | |
P577 | publication date | 2018-05-09 | |
P1433 | published in | Royal Society Open Science | Q18712516 |
P1476 | title | Naive, captive long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis fascicularis) fail to individually and socially learn pound-hammering, a tool-use behaviour. | |
P478 | volume | 5 |