Cognitive and Communicative Abilities of Grey Parrots
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] I. Pepperberg. Comprehension of "absence" by an African Grey parrot: Learning with respect to questions of same/different. , 1988, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior.
[2] I. Pepperberg,et al. Acoustic and articulatory correlates of stop consonants in a parrot and a human subject. , 1998, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.
[3] Karen Wynn,et al. Children's understanding of counting , 1990, Cognition.
[4] I. Pepperberg,et al. Lack of referential vocal learning from LCD video by grey parrots , 2004 .
[5] Mabel L. Rice,et al. Words from Sesame Street : learning vocabulary while viewing , 1990 .
[6] Specifying the relation between novel and known: input affects the acquisition of novel color terms. , 1996, Child development.
[7] N. Humphrey. The Social Function of Intellect , 1976 .
[8] K. Fuson. Children's Counting and Concepts of Number , 1987 .
[9] I. Pepperberg. Numerical competence in an African gray parrot (Psittacus erithacus). , 1994 .
[10] Irene M. Pepperberg,et al. Acquisition of the same/different concept by an African Grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus): Learning with respect to categories of color, shape, and material , 1987 .
[11] D. Rumbaugh,et al. Do apes use language , 1980 .
[12] R. Brown. A First Language , 1973 .
[13] T. Zentall. The Alex Studies , 2001 .
[14] Dietmar Todt,et al. Social Learning of Vocal Patterns and Modes of their Application in Grey Parrots (Psittacus erithacus)1,2,3 , 1975 .
[15] Kevin F. Miller,et al. Thinking about nothing: Development of concepts of zero , 1986 .
[16] P. Marler. A comparative approach to vocal learning: Song development in white-crowned sparrows. , 1970 .
[17] A. Reiner,et al. Do birds possess homologues of mammalian primary visual, somatosensory and motor cortices? , 2000, Trends in Neurosciences.
[18] K. Okanoya,et al. Male Zebra Finches and Bengalese Finches Emit Directed Songs to the Video Images of Conspecific Females Projected onto a TFT Display , 1999 .
[19] A. Peters,et al. Filler syllables: what is their status in emerging grammar? , 2001, Journal of child language.
[20] I. Pepperberg,et al. Simultaneous development of vocal and physical object combinations by a Grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus): bottle caps, lids, and labels. , 2001, Journal of comparative psychology.
[21] I. Pepperberg,et al. Acquisition of a relative class concept by an African gray parrot (Psittacus erithacus): discriminations based on relative size. , 1991, Journal of comparative psychology.
[22] E. Bates,et al. Language comprehension in ape and child. , 1993, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.
[23] P. Greenfield,et al. Strategies used to combine seriated cups by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), bonobos (Pan paniscus), and capuchins (Cebus apella). , 1999, Journal of comparative psychology.
[24] Dare A. Baldwin,et al. Understanding the link between joint attention and language. , 1995 .
[25] I. Pepperberg. Grey Parrot (Psittacus erithacus) numerical abilities: addition and further experiments on a zero-like concept. , 2006, Journal of comparative psychology.
[26] I. Pepperberg,et al. Allospecific vocal learning by Grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus): A failure of videotaped instruction under certain conditions , 1998, Behavioural Processes.
[27] I. Pepperberg,et al. Vocal learning in the Grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus): effects of species identity and number of trainers. , 2000, Journal of comparative psychology.
[28] I. Pepperberg,et al. Number comprehension by a grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus), including a zero-like concept. , 2005, Journal of comparative psychology.
[29] E. Bialystok,et al. Representing quantity beyond whole numbers: some, none, and part. , 2000, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.
[30] David Premack,et al. The codes of man and beasts , 1983, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[31] Irene M. Pepperberg,et al. Grey parrots do not always ‘parrot’: the roles of imitation and phonological awareness in the creation of new labels from existing vocalizations , 2007 .
[32] E. Markman,et al. Sixteen- and 24-month-olds' use of mutual exclusivity as a default assumption in second-label learning , 1994 .
[33] José Luis Bermúdez,et al. Thinking Without Words , 2007 .
[34] R. Seyfarth,et al. Précis of How monkeys see the world , 1992, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[35] I. Pepperberg,et al. Evidence for a form of mutual exclusivity during label acquisition by grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus)? , 2000, Journal of comparative psychology.