Two recently published studies provide important new data relevant to the evolution of human intelligence. Both studies of social behavior in baboons, Bergman et al. demonstrated that baboons use two criteria simultaneously to classify other troop members, and Silk et al. showed that highly social female baboons have higher reproductive success than less social females. Taken together, these studies provide strong evidence for the importance of social context in cognitive evolution
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...
<p>What makes our minds human? How did they evolve to be this way? This dissertation presents data...
This article is for a special issue of J. Comp. Psychol. - Marking Machiavellian Intelligence: Conte...
Two recently published studies provide important new data relevant to the evolution of human intelli...
Two recently published studies provide important new data rel-evant to the evolution of human intell...
Primates lead complex social lives, and this complexity is thought to drive the evolution of social ...
A nimals that live in large, stable social groups face substantial cognitive demands. They must reco...
In this article, we discuss the evolution of human intelligence from a standpoint of comparative cog...
There are consistent individual differences in human intelligence, attributable to a single 'general...
The social brain hypothesis was first proposed to explain the remarkable cognitive abilities of prim...
The social brain hypothesis was proposed as an explanation for the fact that primates have unusually...
There are consistent individual differences in human intelligence, attributable to a single ‘general...
Immatures' social development may be fundamental to understanding important biological processes, su...
Variations in brain size and proportions can be linked to the cognitive capacities of different anim...
Social learning can play a critical role in the reproduction and survival of social animals. Individ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...
<p>What makes our minds human? How did they evolve to be this way? This dissertation presents data...
This article is for a special issue of J. Comp. Psychol. - Marking Machiavellian Intelligence: Conte...
Two recently published studies provide important new data relevant to the evolution of human intelli...
Two recently published studies provide important new data rel-evant to the evolution of human intell...
Primates lead complex social lives, and this complexity is thought to drive the evolution of social ...
A nimals that live in large, stable social groups face substantial cognitive demands. They must reco...
In this article, we discuss the evolution of human intelligence from a standpoint of comparative cog...
There are consistent individual differences in human intelligence, attributable to a single 'general...
The social brain hypothesis was first proposed to explain the remarkable cognitive abilities of prim...
The social brain hypothesis was proposed as an explanation for the fact that primates have unusually...
There are consistent individual differences in human intelligence, attributable to a single ‘general...
Immatures' social development may be fundamental to understanding important biological processes, su...
Variations in brain size and proportions can be linked to the cognitive capacities of different anim...
Social learning can play a critical role in the reproduction and survival of social animals. Individ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...
<p>What makes our minds human? How did they evolve to be this way? This dissertation presents data...
This article is for a special issue of J. Comp. Psychol. - Marking Machiavellian Intelligence: Conte...