Combined predisposed preferences for colour and biological motion make robust development of social attachment through imprinting
Published 2019 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Combined predisposed preferences for colour and biological motion make robust development of social attachment through imprinting
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
ANIMAL COGNITION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Online
2019-11-11
DOI
10.1007/s10071-019-01327-5
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Cortical route for facelike pattern processing in human newborns
- (2019) Marco Buiatti et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Effects of early social deprivation on epigenetic statuses and adaptive behavior of young children: A study based on a cohort of institutionalized infants and toddlers
- (2019) Oxana Yu. Naumova et al. PLoS One
- Embryonic Exposure to Valproic Acid Affects Social Predispositions for Dynamic Cues of Animate Motion in Newly-Hatched Chicks
- (2019) Elena Lorenzi et al. Frontiers in Physiology
- Gene expression of Dio2 (thyroid hormone converting enzyme) in telencephalon is linked with predisposed biological motion preference in domestic chicks
- (2018) Yuri Takemura et al. BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
- Wnt-2b in the intermediate hyperpallium apicale of the telencephalon is critical for the thyroid hormone-mediated opening of the sensitive period for filial imprinting in domestic chicks ( Gallus gallus domesticus )
- (2018) Shinji Yamaguchi et al. HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
- Embryonic Exposure to Valproic Acid Impairs Social Predispositions of Newly-Hatched Chicks
- (2018) Paola Sgadò et al. Scientific Reports
- Priors in Animal and Artificial Intelligence: Where Does Learning Begin?
- (2018) Elisabetta Versace et al. TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES
- Thyroid Hormone Sensitizes the Imprinting-Associated Induction of Biological Motion Preference in Domestic Chicks
- (2018) Momoko Miura et al. Frontiers in Physiology
- The motion of a living conspecific activates septal and preoptic areas in naive domestic chicks (Gallus gallus)
- (2017) Uwe Mayer et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Dynamic features of animate motion activate septal and preoptic areas in visually naïve chicks ( Gallus gallus )
- (2017) Elena Lorenzi et al. NEUROSCIENCE
- Newborn chicks show inherited variability in early social predispositions for hen-like stimuli
- (2017) Elisabetta Versace et al. Scientific Reports
- Biological motion facilitates filial imprinting
- (2016) Momoko Miura et al. ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
- Selective contribution of the telencephalic arcopallium to the social facilitation of foraging efforts in the domestic chick
- (2016) Qiuhong Xin et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Naïve Chicks Prefer Hollow Objects
- (2016) Elisabetta Versace et al. PLoS One
- Ducklings imprint on the relational concept of “same or different”
- (2016) Antone Martinho et al. SCIENCE
- Critical role of the neural pathway from the intermediate medial mesopallium to the intermediate hyperpallium apicale in filial imprinting of domestic chicks (Gallus gallus domesticus)
- (2015) N. Aoki et al. NEUROSCIENCE
- Roots of a social brain: Developmental models of emerging animacy-detection mechanisms
- (2015) O. Rosa Salva et al. NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS
- Number-space mapping in the newborn chick resembles humans' mental number line
- (2015) R. Rugani et al. SCIENCE
- A chicken model for studying the emergence of invariant object recognition
- (2015) Samantha M. W. Wood et al. Frontiers in Neural Circuits
- One, two, three, four, or is there something more? Numerical discrimination in day-old domestic chicks
- (2013) Rosa Rugani et al. ANIMAL COGNITION
- Impaired social behavior in chicks exposed to sodium valproate during the last week of embryogenesis
- (2013) Hideo Nishigori et al. PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
- Preference for biological motion in domestic chicks: sex-dependent effect of early visual experience
- (2012) Momoko Miura et al. ANIMAL COGNITION
- Chicks, like children, spontaneously reorient by three-dimensional environmental geometry, not by image matching
- (2012) S. A. Lee et al. Biology Letters
- Core knowledge of object, number, and geometry: A comparative and neural approach
- (2012) Giorgio Vallortigara COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
- Spatial reorientation by geometry with freestanding objects and extended surfaces: a unifying view
- (2012) T. Pecchia et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- A Critical Period for Social Experience-Dependent Oligodendrocyte Maturation and Myelination
- (2012) M. Makinodan et al. SCIENCE
- Thyroid hormone determines the start of the sensitive period of imprinting and primes later learning
- (2012) Shinji Yamaguchi et al. Nature Communications
- View-based strategy for reorientation by geometry
- (2010) T. Pecchia et al. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
- Innate sensitivity for self-propelled causal agency in newly hatched chicks
- (2010) E. Mascalzoni et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Logic in an asymmetrical (social) brain: Transitive inference in the young domestic chick
- (2010) Jonathan Niall Daisley et al. Social Neuroscience
- Arithmetic in newborn chicks
- (2009) R. Rugani et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- Early social deprivation induces disturbed social communication and violent aggression in adulthood.
- (2008) Máté Tóth et al. BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
- Face perception in monkeys reared with no exposure to faces
- (2008) Y. Sugita PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- A predisposition for biological motion in the newborn baby
- (2008) F. Simion et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Find Funding. Review Successful Grants.
Explore over 25,000 new funding opportunities and over 6,000,000 successful grants.
ExploreAdd your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload Now