© 2016 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved. Despite recent efforts to characterize innovative individuals within a species, we still know very little about the ontogeny of innovation ability. A number of studies have found that innovation rates are correlated with personality traits, such as neophilia and exploration. Juvenile birds are frequently more neophilic and explorative, yet few studies have found evidence of age-related differences in innovative problem-solving success. Here,we showconsistently higher innovation efficiency in juveniles of a wild, omnivorous parrot species across a variety of tasks and contexts.We tested 104 kaka (Nestor meridionalis), ranging in age from four months to 13 years. Twenty...
Behavioural innovation, the use of new behaviours or existing ones in novel contexts, can have impor...
Much of the evidence for the idea that individuals differ in their propensity to innovate and solve ...
Schmelz M, Krüger O, Call J, Krause ET. A comparison of spontaneous problem solving abilities in thr...
Identifying factors that may influence cognitive variation in the wild is essential for furthering o...
The hypothesis that large brains allow animals to produce novel behaviour patterns is supported by t...
Behavioural innovation, the use of new behaviours or existing ones in novel contexts, can have impor...
Parrots and corvids show outstanding innovative and flexible behaviour. In particular, kea and New C...
Motivational and cognitive aspects of spontaneous tool-use acquisition in species that do not do so ...
Humans often have difficulty accurately evaluating the cognitive capacities of nonhuman animals. We ...
This thesis focuses on the relationship between innovation and social learning in the foraging conte...
Exploration (interacting with objects to gain information) and neophobia (avoiding novelty) are cons...
Behavioural flexibility is considered a key factor in the ability to adapt to changing environments....
Foraging innovations are increasingly viewed as a key source of phenotypic plasticity and evolutiona...
SummaryAccounts of complex tool innovations in animals, particularly in species not adaptively speci...
Accounts of complex tool innovations in animals, particularly in species not adaptively specialized ...
Behavioural innovation, the use of new behaviours or existing ones in novel contexts, can have impor...
Much of the evidence for the idea that individuals differ in their propensity to innovate and solve ...
Schmelz M, Krüger O, Call J, Krause ET. A comparison of spontaneous problem solving abilities in thr...
Identifying factors that may influence cognitive variation in the wild is essential for furthering o...
The hypothesis that large brains allow animals to produce novel behaviour patterns is supported by t...
Behavioural innovation, the use of new behaviours or existing ones in novel contexts, can have impor...
Parrots and corvids show outstanding innovative and flexible behaviour. In particular, kea and New C...
Motivational and cognitive aspects of spontaneous tool-use acquisition in species that do not do so ...
Humans often have difficulty accurately evaluating the cognitive capacities of nonhuman animals. We ...
This thesis focuses on the relationship between innovation and social learning in the foraging conte...
Exploration (interacting with objects to gain information) and neophobia (avoiding novelty) are cons...
Behavioural flexibility is considered a key factor in the ability to adapt to changing environments....
Foraging innovations are increasingly viewed as a key source of phenotypic plasticity and evolutiona...
SummaryAccounts of complex tool innovations in animals, particularly in species not adaptively speci...
Accounts of complex tool innovations in animals, particularly in species not adaptively specialized ...
Behavioural innovation, the use of new behaviours or existing ones in novel contexts, can have impor...
Much of the evidence for the idea that individuals differ in their propensity to innovate and solve ...
Schmelz M, Krüger O, Call J, Krause ET. A comparison of spontaneous problem solving abilities in thr...