To understand the animal mind, we have to reconstruct how animals recognize the external world through their own eyes. For the reconstruction to be realistic, explanations must be made both in their proximate causes (brain mechanisms) as well as ultimate causes (evolutionary backgrounds). Here, we review recent advances in the behavioral, psychological, and system-neuroscience studies accomplished using the domestic chick as subjects. Diverse behavioral paradigms are compared (such as filial imprinting, sexual imprinting, one-trial passive avoidance learning, and reinforcement operant conditioning) in their behavioral characterizations (development, sensory and motor aspects of functions, fitness gains) and relevant brain mechanisms. We wil...
Commentary on Marino On Thinking ChickensThe number of publications on chicken cognition and emotion...
Imprinting is a type of learning by which an animal restricts its social preferences to an object af...
Research on avian cognitive neuroscience over the past two decades has revealed the avian brain to b...
2noThe young of the domestic fowl has traditionally proven excellent material for the study of early...
The papers presented in this special issue overlap in themed content to some degree but can be broad...
Investigation of the cognitive abilities of non-human species raises philosophical questions and the...
Neural and behavioural analyses have shown that the formation of filial preferences in young, precoc...
embargoed_20221022In a world full of information, animals have evolved cognitive mechanisms to ignor...
Recent research on developmental science and cognitive neuroscience suggests that human cognitive ab...
A wonderfully lucid framework for the ways to understand animal behaviour is that represented by the...
Newly hatched domestic chicks are known to orient preferentially toward naturalistic stimuli, resemb...
Birds diverged from mammals approximately 300 million years ago. The avian and mammalian telencephal...
Filial imprinting is a process, readily observed in precocial birds, whereby a social attachment is ...
International audienceDuring the last 50 years, comparative cognition and neurosciences have improve...
Habituation and dishabituation reflect two forms of experience-dependent plasticity. Habituation con...
Commentary on Marino On Thinking ChickensThe number of publications on chicken cognition and emotion...
Imprinting is a type of learning by which an animal restricts its social preferences to an object af...
Research on avian cognitive neuroscience over the past two decades has revealed the avian brain to b...
2noThe young of the domestic fowl has traditionally proven excellent material for the study of early...
The papers presented in this special issue overlap in themed content to some degree but can be broad...
Investigation of the cognitive abilities of non-human species raises philosophical questions and the...
Neural and behavioural analyses have shown that the formation of filial preferences in young, precoc...
embargoed_20221022In a world full of information, animals have evolved cognitive mechanisms to ignor...
Recent research on developmental science and cognitive neuroscience suggests that human cognitive ab...
A wonderfully lucid framework for the ways to understand animal behaviour is that represented by the...
Newly hatched domestic chicks are known to orient preferentially toward naturalistic stimuli, resemb...
Birds diverged from mammals approximately 300 million years ago. The avian and mammalian telencephal...
Filial imprinting is a process, readily observed in precocial birds, whereby a social attachment is ...
International audienceDuring the last 50 years, comparative cognition and neurosciences have improve...
Habituation and dishabituation reflect two forms of experience-dependent plasticity. Habituation con...
Commentary on Marino On Thinking ChickensThe number of publications on chicken cognition and emotion...
Imprinting is a type of learning by which an animal restricts its social preferences to an object af...
Research on avian cognitive neuroscience over the past two decades has revealed the avian brain to b...