This research was carried out with funding from a departmental studentship from the School of Psychology and Neuroscience of the University of St Andrews, and a Russell Trust Postgraduate Award to A.F.S.Orienting to gaze-direction is widespread among animal species, but evidence for spontaneous use of gesture for direction is limited [1]. Remarkably, African elephants (Loxodonta africana) have been found able to follow human pointing, including subtle actions in which the contralateral hand is used, and in which the body silhouette is not broken [2,3]. The natural origin of this ability is puzzling, as the species is not reported to use trunk- or limb-gesture for showing directions [4]. One natural gesture, the ‘periscope-sniff’ presumed to...
Lateralization of hand use in primates has been extensively studied in a variety of contexts, and st...
Elephants\u27 use of their trunks during feeding in captivity is described. African and Asian elepha...
Elephants show a rich social organization and display a number of unusual traits. In this paper, we ...
This research was carried out with funding from a departmental studentship from the School of Psycho...
This work was funded by the School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews.How do a...
We thank the School of Psychology and Neuroscience of the University of St Andrews for providing the...
This research was carried out with funding from a departmental studentship from the School of Psycho...
Factors influencing the abilities of different animals to use cooperative social cues from humans ar...
SummaryHow animals gain information from attending to the behavior of others has been widely studied...
How do animals determine when others are able and disposed to receive their communicative signals? I...
Recent research suggests that domesticated species--due to artificial selection by humans for specif...
Elephants’ complex societies, well-developed communication systems, evolutionary history and close w...
Recent research suggests that domesticated species – due to artificial selection by humans for speci...
Monitoring the location of conspecifics may be important to social mammals. Here we use an expectanc...
Social animals use individual identity cues to form and maintain social relationships with conspecif...
Lateralization of hand use in primates has been extensively studied in a variety of contexts, and st...
Elephants\u27 use of their trunks during feeding in captivity is described. African and Asian elepha...
Elephants show a rich social organization and display a number of unusual traits. In this paper, we ...
This research was carried out with funding from a departmental studentship from the School of Psycho...
This work was funded by the School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews.How do a...
We thank the School of Psychology and Neuroscience of the University of St Andrews for providing the...
This research was carried out with funding from a departmental studentship from the School of Psycho...
Factors influencing the abilities of different animals to use cooperative social cues from humans ar...
SummaryHow animals gain information from attending to the behavior of others has been widely studied...
How do animals determine when others are able and disposed to receive their communicative signals? I...
Recent research suggests that domesticated species--due to artificial selection by humans for specif...
Elephants’ complex societies, well-developed communication systems, evolutionary history and close w...
Recent research suggests that domesticated species – due to artificial selection by humans for speci...
Monitoring the location of conspecifics may be important to social mammals. Here we use an expectanc...
Social animals use individual identity cues to form and maintain social relationships with conspecif...
Lateralization of hand use in primates has been extensively studied in a variety of contexts, and st...
Elephants\u27 use of their trunks during feeding in captivity is described. African and Asian elepha...
Elephants show a rich social organization and display a number of unusual traits. In this paper, we ...