Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
about
Navigation outside of the box: what the lab can learn from the field and what the field can learn from the labBarriers and traps: great apes' performance in two functionally equivalent tasks.Task-specific modulation of adult humans' tool preferences: number of choices and size of the problem.Adult humans' understanding of support relations: an up-linkage replication.More but not less uncertainty makes adult humans' tool selections more similar to those reported with crows.
P2860
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
description
2006 nî lūn-bûn
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2006年の論文
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2006年学术文章
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2006年学术文章
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2006年学术文章
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2006年学术文章
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2006年學術文章
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name
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@en
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@nl
type
label
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@en
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@nl
prefLabel
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@en
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@nl
P2860
P356
P1476
Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior.
@en
P2093
Francisco J Silva
Kathleen M Silva
P2860
P2888
P304
P356
10.3758/BF03193982
P577
2006-08-01T00:00:00Z
P6179
1025141374