about
Visually inexperienced chicks exhibit spontaneous preference for biological motion patternsNumerical abstraction in young domestic chicks (Gallus gallus)Spontaneous discrimination of possible and impossible objects by newly hatched chicksThe evolution of social orienting: evidence from chicks (Gallus gallus) and human newbornsIs it only humans that count from left to right?Spatial reversal learning is impaired by age in pet dogs.Lateralized mechanisms for encoding of object. Behavioral evidence from an animal model: the domestic chick (Gallus gallus).Mapping number to space in the two hemispheres of the avian brain.Animal cognition.Animal visual perception.The use of proportion by young domestic chicks (Gallus gallus).Mom's shadow: structure-from-motion in newly hatched chicks as revealed by an imprinting procedure.Use of kind information for object individuation in young domestic chicks.One, two, three, four, or is there something more? Numerical discrimination in day-old domestic chicks.Chicks prefer to peck at insect-like elongated stimuli moving in a direction orthogonal to their longer axis.Animal cognition. Number-space mapping in the newborn chick resembles humans' mental number line.Numerical discrimination by frogs (Bombina orientalis).Spatial reorientation in rats (Rattus norvegicus): use of geometric and featural information as a function of arena size and feature location.Biological motion preference in humans at birth: role of dynamic and configural properties.Spatial reorientation: the effects of space size on the encoding of landmark and geometry information.Imprinted numbers: newborn chicks' sensitivity to number vs. continuous extent of objects they have been reared with.Perception of the Ebbinghaus illusion in four-day-old domestic chicks (Gallus gallus).The development of responses to novel-coloured objects in male and female domestic chicks.Brain asymmetry modulates perception of biological motion in newborn chicks (Gallus gallus).Time-dependent lateralization of social learning in the domestic chick (Gallus gallus domesticus): Effects of retention delays in the observed lateralization pattern.Logic in an asymmetrical (social) brain: Transitive inference in the young domestic chick.Chicks discriminate human gaze with their right hemisphere.Detour behaviour, imprinting and visual lateralization in the domestic chick.Preference for symmetry is experience dependent in newborn chicks (Gallus gallus).Lateralized righting behavior in the tortoise (Testudo hermanni).Gravity bias in the interpretation of biological motion by inexperienced chicks.Visual lateralisation, form preferences, and secondary imprinting in the domestic chick.Inversion of contrast polarity abolishes spontaneous preferences for face-like stimuli in newborn chicks.Effects of light stimulation of embryos on the use of position-specific and object-specific cues in binocular and monocular domestic chicks (Gallus gallus).From small to large: numerical discrimination by young domestic chicks (Gallus gallus).Object individuation in 3-day-old chicks: use of property and spatiotemporal information.Lateral asymmetries during responses to novel-coloured objects in the domestic chick: A developmental study.The first time ever I saw your feet: inversion effect in newborns' sensitivity to biological motion.The cradle of causal reasoning: newborns' preference for physical causality.Faces are special for newly hatched chicks: evidence for inborn domain-specific mechanisms underlying spontaneous preferences for face-like stimuli.
P50
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P50
description
hulumtuese
@sq
researcher
@en
wetenschapper
@nl
հետազոտող
@hy
name
Lucia Regolin
@ast
Lucia Regolin
@en
Lucia Regolin
@es
Lucia Regolin
@nl
Lucia Regolin
@sl
type
label
Lucia Regolin
@ast
Lucia Regolin
@en
Lucia Regolin
@es
Lucia Regolin
@nl
Lucia Regolin
@sl
prefLabel
Lucia Regolin
@ast
Lucia Regolin
@en
Lucia Regolin
@es
Lucia Regolin
@nl
Lucia Regolin
@sl
P106
P1153
6602982905
P21
P31
P496
0000-0001-8960-0309