National audienceHumans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a cognitive skill that underpins logical and mathematical reasoning. Recent research shows that some of these abilities for statistical inferences can emerge in preverbal infants and non-human primates such as apes and capuchins. An important question is therefore whether animals share the full complement of intuitive reasoning abilities demonstrated by humans, as well as what evolutionary contexts promote the emergence of such skills. Here, we examined whether free-ranging rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) can use probability information to infer the most likely outcome of a random lottery, in the first test of whether primate...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
National audienceHumans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
National audienceHumans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
Human infants, apes and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions f...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
National audienceHumans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
National audienceHumans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
Humans can use an intuitive sense of statistics to make predictions about uncertain future events, a...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
The ability to reason about probabilities has ecological relevance for many species. Recent research...
Human infants, apes and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions f...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...
Human infants, apes, and capuchin monkeys engage in intuitive statistics: they generate predictions ...