Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
about
Cross-modal individual recognition in wild African lionsAcoustic profiling in a complexly social species, the American crow: caws encode information on caller sex, identity, and behavioural context.Speed and accuracy in nest-mate recognition: a hover wasp prioritizes face recognition over colony odour cues to minimize intrusion by outsidersDogs recognize dog and human emotions.Social familiarity affects Diana monkey (Cercopithecus diana diana) alarm call responses in habitat-specific ways.Familiarity perception call elicited under restricted sensory cues in peer-social interactions of the domestic chick.You sound familiar: carrion crows can differentiate between the calls of known and unknown heterospecifics.Rhesus macaques recognize unique multimodal face-voice relations of familiar individuals and not of unfamiliar ones.Social calls produced within and near the roost in two species of tent-making bats, Dermanura watsoni and Ectophylla albaThe development of support intuitions and object causality in juvenile Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius).Are horses capable of mirror self-recognition? A pilot study.Cross-modal recognition of familiar conspecifics in goats.New perspectives in gaze sensitivity research.Avian brains: Insights from development, behaviors and evolution.Age-based discrimination of rival males in western bluebirds.Comparing the face inversion effect in crows and humans.Alarm calls evoke a visual search image of a predator in birds.How the human brain exchanges information across sensory modalities to recognize other people.Numerical assessment in the wild: insights from social carnivores.Individual recognition through olfactory-auditory matching in lemurs.Cross-modal individual recognition in domestic horses (Equus caballus) extends to familiar humans.Comparative thanatology, an integrative approach: exploring sensory/cognitive aspects of death recognition in vertebrates and invertebratesCross-Modal Correspondences in Non-human Mammal Communication
P2860
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P2860
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
description
2012 nî lūn-bûn
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2012年の論文
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
@zh-cn
2012年学术文章
@zh-hans
2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年學術文章
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2012年學術文章
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name
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@en
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@nl
type
label
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@en
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@nl
prefLabel
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@en
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Crows cross-modally recognize group members but not non-group members.
@en
P2093
Ei-Ichi Izawa
Noriko Kondo
Shigeru Watanabe
P2860
P304
P356
10.1098/RSPB.2011.2419
P577
2012-01-04T00:00:00Z