Young domestic chicks and adult Clark’s nutcrackers can learn to identify a target element (i.e. the 4th) in a series of fixed and identical elements, sagittally oriented with respect to the birds’ starting point. A peculiar finding is that whenever birds are required to generalize on a left/right oriented series, birds refer the correct position starting from the left end (Rugani et al. 2007, 2010, 2011). Possibly this leftward bias is a result of right hemispheric dominance in visuospatial tasks, resulting in the left visual hemifield controlling the birds’ behavior (Diekamp et al. 2005; Regolin 2006). Here, to disentangle the engagement of either hemisphere in dealing with the ordinal task and in determining the leftward bias, we used t...
Vertebrate brains display physiological and anatomical left-right differences, which are related to ...
& Research has proved that disoriented children and nonhu-man animals can reorient themselves us...
AbstractFunctional cerebral asymmetries, once thought to be exclusively human, are now accepted to b...
Young domestic chicks, when trained to identify the 4th element in a series of identical elements, a...
Young domestic chicks, trained to identify a target element (i.e. the 4th) in a series identical ele...
Different species show an intriguing similarity in representing numerosity in space, starting from l...
In this review, we discuss evidence showing that birds (Gallus gallus and Nucifraga columbiana) repr...
Humans primarily attend to objects in the left side of space, as shown in cancellation tasks routine...
When trained to peck a selected position in a sagittally-oriented series of identical food container...
We report that adult nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) and newborn domestic chicks (Gallus gallus) ...
In our previous research we reported a leftward-asymmetry in domestic chicks required to identify a ...
We orient numbers from left (small numerical values) to right (large numerical values) (Dehaene et a...
Adult humans map numbers onto a mental number line oriented from left to right. It is not clear if t...
AbstractRecent evidence has demonstrated that, in animals with laterally placed eyes, functional cer...
Vertebrate brains display physiological and anatomical left-right differences, which are related to ...
Vertebrate brains display physiological and anatomical left-right differences, which are related to ...
& Research has proved that disoriented children and nonhu-man animals can reorient themselves us...
AbstractFunctional cerebral asymmetries, once thought to be exclusively human, are now accepted to b...
Young domestic chicks, when trained to identify the 4th element in a series of identical elements, a...
Young domestic chicks, trained to identify a target element (i.e. the 4th) in a series identical ele...
Different species show an intriguing similarity in representing numerosity in space, starting from l...
In this review, we discuss evidence showing that birds (Gallus gallus and Nucifraga columbiana) repr...
Humans primarily attend to objects in the left side of space, as shown in cancellation tasks routine...
When trained to peck a selected position in a sagittally-oriented series of identical food container...
We report that adult nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) and newborn domestic chicks (Gallus gallus) ...
In our previous research we reported a leftward-asymmetry in domestic chicks required to identify a ...
We orient numbers from left (small numerical values) to right (large numerical values) (Dehaene et a...
Adult humans map numbers onto a mental number line oriented from left to right. It is not clear if t...
AbstractRecent evidence has demonstrated that, in animals with laterally placed eyes, functional cer...
Vertebrate brains display physiological and anatomical left-right differences, which are related to ...
Vertebrate brains display physiological and anatomical left-right differences, which are related to ...
& Research has proved that disoriented children and nonhu-man animals can reorient themselves us...
AbstractFunctional cerebral asymmetries, once thought to be exclusively human, are now accepted to b...