Nonhuman great apes and human children were tested for an understanding that appearance does not always correspond to reality. Subjects were 29 great apes (bonobos [Pan paniscus], chimpanzees [Pan troglodytes], gorillas [Gorilla gorilla], and orangutans [Pongo abelii]) and 24 21/2-year-old children. In our task, we occluded portions of 1 large and 1 small food stick such that the size relations seemed reversed. Subjects could then choose which one they wanted. There was 1 control condition and 2 experimental conditions (administered within subjects). In the control condition subjects saw only the apparent stick sizes, whereas in the 2 experimental conditions they saw the true stick sizes as well (the difference between them being what the s...
There is ongoing debate about the extent to which nonhuman animals, like humans, can go beyond first...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
In a previous study, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, and capuchin monkeys faced a task that requir...
A milestone in human development is coming to recognize that how something looks is not necessarily ...
We investigated whether nonhuman great apes (N=23), 2.5-year-old (N=20), and 3-year-old children (N=...
Humans use tools with specific functions to solve tasks more efficiently. However, functional specia...
It has been argued that humans' susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
When presented with the broken cloth problem, both human children and nonhuman great apes prefer to ...
Recent research suggests that gorillas' and orangutans' object representations survive cohesion viol...
Several recent studies have documented that non-human primates can individuate objects according to ...
We gratefully acknowledge financial support by the German National Academic Foundation.Although chim...
Recent research suggests that gorillas' and orangutans' object representations survive cohesion viol...
There is ongoing debate about the extent to which nonhuman animals, like humans, can go beyond first...
Inductive learning from limited observations is a cognitive capacity of fundamental importance. In h...
It has been argued that humans’ susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
There is ongoing debate about the extent to which nonhuman animals, like humans, can go beyond first...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
In a previous study, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, and capuchin monkeys faced a task that requir...
A milestone in human development is coming to recognize that how something looks is not necessarily ...
We investigated whether nonhuman great apes (N=23), 2.5-year-old (N=20), and 3-year-old children (N=...
Humans use tools with specific functions to solve tasks more efficiently. However, functional specia...
It has been argued that humans' susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
When presented with the broken cloth problem, both human children and nonhuman great apes prefer to ...
Recent research suggests that gorillas' and orangutans' object representations survive cohesion viol...
Several recent studies have documented that non-human primates can individuate objects according to ...
We gratefully acknowledge financial support by the German National Academic Foundation.Although chim...
Recent research suggests that gorillas' and orangutans' object representations survive cohesion viol...
There is ongoing debate about the extent to which nonhuman animals, like humans, can go beyond first...
Inductive learning from limited observations is a cognitive capacity of fundamental importance. In h...
It has been argued that humans’ susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
There is ongoing debate about the extent to which nonhuman animals, like humans, can go beyond first...
A surprising finding in comparative social cognition is that great apes seem to have difficulties un...
In a previous study, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, and capuchin monkeys faced a task that requir...