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Bonnie M Perdue

Showing results (11-20 of 46) with videos related to

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Primates; Journal of Primatology|August 1, 2014
Double invisible displacement understanding in orangutans: testing in non-locomotor and locomotor spaceSuma Mallavarapu, Tara S Stoinski, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
American Journal of Primatology|January 10, 2013
Can black-and-white ruffed lemurs (Varecia variegata) solve object permanence tasks?Suma Mallavarapu, Bonnie M Perdue, Tara S Stoinski, et al.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology|October 30, 2015
The elusive illusion: Do children (Homo sapiens) and capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) see the Solitaire illusion?Audrey E Parrish, Christian Agrillo, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
Behavioural Processes|January 14, 2014
Working and waiting for better rewards: self-control in two monkey species (Cebus apella and Macaca mulatta)Theodore A Evans, Bonnie M Perdue, Audrey E Parrish, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Learning and Cognition|November 10, 2015
Capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) modulate their use of an uncertainty response depending on riskMichael J Beran, Bonnie M Perdue, Barbara A Church, et al.
International Journal of Comparative Psychology|March 18, 2016
Exploring Potential Mechanisms Underlying the Lack of Uncertainty Monitoring in Capuchin MonkeysBonnie M Perdue, Barbara A Church, J David Smith, et al.
Animal Cognition|February 6, 2013
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) transfer tokens repeatedly with a partner to accumulate rewards in a self-control taskAudrey E Parrish, Bonnie M Perdue, Theodore A Evans, et al.
Animal Cognition|June 14, 2012
Putting the elephant back in the herd: elephant relative quantity judgments match those of other speciesBonnie M Perdue, Catherine F Talbot, Adam M Stone, et al.
International Journal of Comparative Psychology|November 25, 2014
Comparative Cognition: Past, Present, and FutureMichael J Beran, Audrey E Parrish, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
Animal Cognition|May 31, 2015
Waiting for what comes later: capuchin monkeys show self-control even for nonvisible delayed rewardsBonnie M Perdue, Jessica L Bramlett, Theodore A Evans, et al.
Pageof 5

Showing results (11-20 of 46) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 5
Primates; Journal of Primatology|August 1, 2014
Double invisible displacement understanding in orangutans: testing in non-locomotor and locomotor spaceSuma Mallavarapu, Tara S Stoinski, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
American Journal of Primatology|January 10, 2013
Can black-and-white ruffed lemurs (Varecia variegata) solve object permanence tasks?Suma Mallavarapu, Bonnie M Perdue, Tara S Stoinski, et al.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology|October 30, 2015
The elusive illusion: Do children (Homo sapiens) and capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) see the Solitaire illusion?Audrey E Parrish, Christian Agrillo, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
Behavioural Processes|January 14, 2014
Working and waiting for better rewards: self-control in two monkey species (Cebus apella and Macaca mulatta)Theodore A Evans, Bonnie M Perdue, Audrey E Parrish, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Learning and Cognition|November 10, 2015
Capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) modulate their use of an uncertainty response depending on riskMichael J Beran, Bonnie M Perdue, Barbara A Church, et al.
International Journal of Comparative Psychology|March 18, 2016
Exploring Potential Mechanisms Underlying the Lack of Uncertainty Monitoring in Capuchin MonkeysBonnie M Perdue, Barbara A Church, J David Smith, et al.
Animal Cognition|February 6, 2013
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) transfer tokens repeatedly with a partner to accumulate rewards in a self-control taskAudrey E Parrish, Bonnie M Perdue, Theodore A Evans, et al.
Animal Cognition|June 14, 2012
Putting the elephant back in the herd: elephant relative quantity judgments match those of other speciesBonnie M Perdue, Catherine F Talbot, Adam M Stone, et al.
International Journal of Comparative Psychology|November 25, 2014
Comparative Cognition: Past, Present, and FutureMichael J Beran, Audrey E Parrish, Bonnie M Perdue, et al.
Animal Cognition|May 31, 2015
Waiting for what comes later: capuchin monkeys show self-control even for nonvisible delayed rewardsBonnie M Perdue, Jessica L Bramlett, Theodore A Evans, et al.
Pageof 5