This is a selective review of the published literature on object-choice tasks, where participants use directional cues to find hidden objects. This literature comprises the efforts of researchers to make sense of the sense-making capacities of our nearest living relatives. This chapter is written to highlight some nonsensical conclusions that frequently emerge from this research. The data suggest that when apes are given approximately the same sense-making opportunities as we provide our children, then they will easily make sense of our social signals. The ubiquity of nonsensical contemporary scientific claims to the effect that humans are essentially--or inherently--more capable than other great apes in the understanding of simple dire...
It is 35 years since Premack & Woodruff famously asked, 'Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mi...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
This article questions traditional experimental approaches to the study of primate cognition. Becaus...
In his classic analysis, The Mismeasure of Man, Gould (1981) demolished the idea that intelligence w...
This book develops a new theory of the evolutionary origins of human abilities to understand the wor...
Comparative psychologists have recently agreed that some nonhuman animals, such as chimpanzees, are ...
Twenty-five years ago, at the founding of this journal, there existed only a few conflicting finding...
<p>What makes our minds human? How did they evolve to be this way? This dissertation presents data...
Tool use is an important aspect of being human that has assumed a central place in accounts of the e...
Individuals endowed with a ‘Theory of Mind’ (‘ToM’) understand themselves and others as...
This article has two goals. The first is to assess, in the face of accruing reports on the ingenuity...
The question of what has shaped primates’ (and other species’) cognitive capacities, whether technic...
Humans and other great apes are similar in so many ways. We share an extended immaturity and intense...
Several species can detect when they are uncertain about what decision to make –revealed by opting o...
The research leading to these results has received funding from the People Programme (Marie Curie Ac...
It is 35 years since Premack & Woodruff famously asked, 'Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mi...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
This article questions traditional experimental approaches to the study of primate cognition. Becaus...
In his classic analysis, The Mismeasure of Man, Gould (1981) demolished the idea that intelligence w...
This book develops a new theory of the evolutionary origins of human abilities to understand the wor...
Comparative psychologists have recently agreed that some nonhuman animals, such as chimpanzees, are ...
Twenty-five years ago, at the founding of this journal, there existed only a few conflicting finding...
<p>What makes our minds human? How did they evolve to be this way? This dissertation presents data...
Tool use is an important aspect of being human that has assumed a central place in accounts of the e...
Individuals endowed with a ‘Theory of Mind’ (‘ToM’) understand themselves and others as...
This article has two goals. The first is to assess, in the face of accruing reports on the ingenuity...
The question of what has shaped primates’ (and other species’) cognitive capacities, whether technic...
Humans and other great apes are similar in so many ways. We share an extended immaturity and intense...
Several species can detect when they are uncertain about what decision to make –revealed by opting o...
The research leading to these results has received funding from the People Programme (Marie Curie Ac...
It is 35 years since Premack & Woodruff famously asked, 'Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mi...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
This article questions traditional experimental approaches to the study of primate cognition. Becaus...