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Critical issues in experimental studies of prosociality in non-human speciesFamiliarity affects other-regarding preferences in pet dogs.Exploring Differences in Dogs' and Wolves' Preference for Risk in a Foraging TaskInvestigating Empathy-Like Responding to Conspecifics' Distress in Pet DogsInvestigating the Function of Play Bows in Dog and Wolf Puppies (Canis lupus familiaris, Canis lupus occidentalis).Dogs Do Not Show Pro-social Preferences towards Humans.What Are the Ingredients for an Inequity Paradigm? Manipulating the Experimenter's Involvement in an Inequity Task with Dogs.Reward type and behavioural patterns predict dogs' success in a delay of gratification paradigm.The role of domestication and experience in 'looking back' towards humans in an unsolvable task.Measures of Dogs' Inhibitory Control Abilities Do Not Correlate across Tasks.The influence of social relationship on food tolerance in wolves and dogsThe effect of domestication on inhibitory control: wolves and dogs compared.Inequity Aversion Negatively Affects Tolerance and Contact-Seeking Behaviours towards Partner and Experimenter.Play Behavior in Wolves: Using the '50:50' Rule to Test for Egalitarian Play Styles.Task Differences and Prosociality; Investigating Pet Dogs' Prosocial Preferences in a Token Choice ParadigmMotivational Factors Underlying Problem Solving: Comparing Wolf and Dog Puppies' Explorative and Neophobic Behaviors at 5, 6, and 8 Weeks of AgeDogs' reaction to inequity is affected by inhibitory control.Importance of a species' socioecology: Wolves outperform dogs in a conspecific cooperation task.Domestication Does Not Explain the Presence of Inequity Aversion in Dogs.Do females use their sexual status to gain resource access? Investigating food-for-sex in wolves and dogs.The effect of domestication on post-conflict management: wolves reconcile while dogs avoid each otherA task-experienced partner does not help dogs be as successful as wolves in a cooperative string-pulling taskFood preferences of similarly raised and kept captive dogs and wolvesIn wolves, play behaviour reflects the partners' affiliative and dominance relationshipPet dogs' relationships vary rather individually than according to partner's speciesWolves lead and dogs follow, but they both cooperate with humans
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description
onderzoeker
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հետազոտող
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S Marshall-Pescini
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S Marshall-Pescini
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S Marshall-Pescini
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S Marshall-Pescini
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Marshall-Pescini S
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S Marshall-Pescini
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P108
P106
P1153
23467537600
P31
P496
0000-0002-5944-4701