Differences in cognitive abilities among primates are concentrated on G: Phenotypic and phylogenetic comparisons with two meta-analytical databases
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. Nijenhuis | H. Fernandes | M. Woodley | Jan te Nijenhuis | Heitor B. F. Fernandes | Michael A. Woodley
[1] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Spearman's hypothesis tested on European Jews vs non-Jewish Whites and vs Oriental Jews: Two meta-analyses , 2014 .
[2] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Controlling for increased guessing enhances the independence of the Flynn effect from g: The return of the Brand effect , 2014 .
[3] C. Chabris,et al. Animal Models of General Cognitive Ability for Genetic Research into Cognitive Functioning , 2014 .
[4] C. Reynolds,et al. Behavior Genetics of Cognition Across the Lifespan , 2014 .
[5] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Is the Flynn effect on g?: A meta-analysis , 2013 .
[6] G. Roth. The Long Evolution of Brains and Minds , 2013 .
[7] N. Cooper,et al. Phylogenetic signal in primate behaviour, ecology and life history , 2013, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[8] J. Call,et al. Tool use in animals : Cognition and ecology , 2013 .
[9] D. Adams. Comparing evolutionary rates for different phenotypic traits on a phylogeny using likelihood. , 2013, Systematic biology.
[10] Bradley J. Barney,et al. A Modular Mind? A Test Using Individual Data from Seven Primate Species , 2012, PloS one.
[11] J. Call,et al. The evolution of primate societies , 2012 .
[12] T. Jombart,et al. How to measure and test phylogenetic signal , 2012 .
[13] H. Rindermann,et al. Haplogroups as evolutionary markers of cognitive ability , 2012 .
[14] Julia Fischer,et al. Old World Monkeys Compare to Apes in the Primate Cognition Test Battery , 2012, PloS one.
[15] Liam J. Revell,et al. phytools: an R package for phylogenetic comparative biology (and other things) , 2012 .
[16] M. Tomasello,et al. Human Cultural Cognition , 2012 .
[17] M. Hofman,et al. Evolution of the primate brain : from neuron to behavior , 2012 .
[18] Gerhard Roth,et al. Evolution of the brain and intelligence in primates. , 2012, Progress in brain research.
[19] J. P. Rushton,et al. IQ, skin color, crime, HIV/AIDS, and income in 50 U.S. states , 2011 .
[20] J. Gray,et al. General intelligence predicts reasoning ability even for evolutionarily familiar content , 2011 .
[21] Kevin N Laland,et al. The evolution of primate general and cultural intelligence , 2011, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[22] S. O’Brien,et al. A Molecular Phylogeny of Living Primates , 2011, PLoS genetics.
[23] L. Lefebvre. Taxonomic counts of cognition in the wild , 2011, Biology Letters.
[24] M. Woodley. Are high-IQ individuals deficient in common sense? A critical examination of the ‘clever sillies’ hypothesis , 2010 .
[25] Robin I. M. Dunbar,et al. Species differences in executive function correlate with hippocampus volume and neocortex ratio across nonhuman primates. , 2010, Journal of comparative psychology.
[26] J. L. Gittleman,et al. EARLY BURSTS OF BODY SIZE AND SHAPE EVOLUTION ARE RARE IN COMPARATIVE DATA , 2010, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[27] T. Matsuzawa. Cognitive development in chimpanzees: A trade-off between memory and abstraction? , 2010 .
[28] Luke J. Matthews,et al. The 10kTrees website: A new online resource for primate phylogeny , 2010 .
[29] P. W. Dodd,et al. The Pooling Fallacy: Problems Arising when Individuals Contribute More than One Observation to the Data Set , 2010 .
[30] J. P. Rushton,et al. The rise and fall of the Flynn Effect as a reason to expect a narrowing of the Black–White IQ gap ☆ , 2010 .
[31] M. Tomasello,et al. The Structure of Individual Differences in the Cognitive Abilities of Children and Chimpanzees , 2010, Psychological science.
[32] T. Shackelford,et al. The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution , 2010 .
[33] Michael Tomasello,et al. Primate Cognition , 2010, Top. Cogn. Sci..
[34] D. Ackerly. Conservatism and diversification of plant functional traits: Evolutionary rates versus phylogenetic signal , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[35] Valen E. Johnson,et al. General Intelligence in Another Primate: Individual Differences across Cognitive Task Performance in a New World Monkey (Saguinus oedipus) , 2009, PloS one.
[36] L. Lefebvre,et al. Brains, Lifestyles and Cognition: Are There General Trends? , 2008, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[37] L. Revell,et al. Phylogenetic signal, evolutionary process, and rate. , 2008, Systematic biology.
[38] Michael A. McDaniel,et al. Subgroup Differences in Situational Judgment Test Performance: A Meta-Analysis , 2008 .
[39] Daniel Sol,et al. Brain Size Predicts the Success of Mammal Species Introduced into Novel Environments , 2008, The American Naturalist.
[40] S. Dobson,et al. The degree and pattern of phylogenetic signal in primate long-bone structure. , 2008, Journal of human evolution.
[41] V. Girotto,et al. Is domain-general thinking a domain-specific adaptation? , 2008 .
[42] T. Matsuzawa. Primate Foundations of Human Intelligence: A View of Tool Use in Nonhuman Primates and Fossil Hominids , 2008 .
[43] R. Darlington,et al. Factor Analysis , 2008 .
[44] Luke J. Harmon,et al. GEIGER: investigating evolutionary radiations , 2008, Bioinform..
[45] W. Frankenhuis,et al. Evolutionary Psychology Versus Fodor: Arguments For and Against the Massive Modularity Hypothesis , 2007 .
[46] M. Tomasello,et al. Humans Have Evolved Specialized Skills of Social Cognition: The Cultural Intelligence Hypothesis , 2007, Science.
[47] H. Rindermann,et al. The g‐factor of international cognitive ability comparisons: the homogeneity of results in PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS and IQ‐tests across nations , 2007 .
[48] S. T. Sakai,et al. The Spotted Hyena (Crocuta crocuta) as a Model System for Study of the Evolution of Intelligence , 2007 .
[49] Robert O Deaner,et al. Overall Brain Size, and Not Encephalization Quotient, Best Predicts Cognitive Ability across Non-Human Primates , 2007, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[50] Kay E. Holekamp,et al. Questioning the social intelligence hypothesis , 2007, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[51] R. Milo,et al. Tools, language and cognition in human evolution , 1995, International Journal of Primatology.
[52] K. Gibson. Epigenesis, Mental Construction, and the Emergence of Language and Toolmaking. , 2007 .
[53] H. Nyborg,et al. Testing the cross-racial generality of Spearman's hypothesis in two samples , 2007 .
[54] L. Lefebvre. Forebrain Size and Social Intelligence in Birds , 2007 .
[55] J. P. Rushton,et al. General mental ability in South Asians: Data from three Roma (Gypsy) communities in Serbia , 2007 .
[56] H. Barrett,et al. Modularity in cognition: framing the debate. , 2006, Psychological review.
[57] Michael J. Sanderson,et al. TESTING FOR DIFFERENT RATES OF CONTINUOUS TRAIT EVOLUTION USING LIKELIHOOD , 2006, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[58] D. Borsboom,et al. Why g is not an adaptation: a comment on Kanazawa (2004). , 2006, Psychological review.
[59] V. Johnson,et al. Do Some Taxa Have Better Domain-General Cognition than others? A Meta-Analysis of Nonhuman Primate Studies , 2006 .
[60] Richard Lynn,et al. Race differences in intelligence: An evolutionary analysis. , 2006 .
[61] N. Tinbergen. On aims and methods of Ethology , 2010 .
[62] Jason W. Osborne,et al. Best practices in exploratory factor analysis: four recommendations for getting the most from your analysis. , 2005 .
[63] J. P. Rushton,et al. THIRTY YEARS OF RESEARCH ON RACE DIFFERENCES IN COGNITIVE ABILITY , 2005 .
[64] L. Lefebvre,et al. Big brains, enhanced cognition, and response of birds to novel environments. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[65] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Immigrant-majority group differences on work-related measures: the case for cognitive complexity , 2005 .
[66] D. Chiappe,et al. The Evolution of Domain-General Mechanisms in Intelligence and Learning , 2005, The Journal of general psychology.
[67] N. Sesardić. Making sense of heritability , 2005 .
[68] R. Byrne,et al. Neocortex size predicts deception rate in primates , 2004, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[69] L. Lefebvre,et al. Brains, Innovations and Evolution in Birds and Primates , 2004, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[70] Korbinian Strimmer,et al. APE: Analyses of Phylogenetics and Evolution in R language , 2004, Bioinform..
[71] A. Russon,et al. Socially Mediated Learning among Monkeys and Apes: Some Comparative Perspectives , 2004 .
[72] Wilma C. M. Resing,et al. Does Cultural Background Influence the Intellectual Performance of Children from Immigrant Groups , 2004 .
[73] T. U. Grafe,et al. Rapidly evolving traits and the comparative method: how important is testing for phylogenetic signal? , 2004 .
[74] S. Shettleworth. Memory and Hippocampal Specialization in Food-Storing Birds: Challenges for Research on Comparative Cognition , 2003, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[75] T. Garland,et al. TESTING FOR PHYLOGENETIC SIGNAL IN COMPARATIVE DATA: BEHAVIORAL TRAITS ARE MORE LABILE , 2003, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[76] R. L. Day,et al. Neophilia, innovation and social learning: a study of intergeneric differences in callitrichid monkeys , 2003, Animal Behaviour.
[77] J. Panksepp,et al. Comparative approaches in evolutionary psychology: molecular neuroscience meets the mind. , 2002, Neuro endocrinology letters.
[78] A. Grant,et al. Life History Evolution , 2002, Heredity.
[79] K. Laland,et al. Social intelligence, innovation, and enhanced brain size in primates , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[80] J. Osborne. Notes on the use of data transformations. , 2002 .
[81] D. Roff. Life History, Evolution of , 2001 .
[82] Jaak Panksepp,et al. The seven sins of evolutionary psychology , 2001 .
[83] K. Webb,et al. The Nature of Intelligence , 2000 .
[84] L. Lefebvre,et al. Relative Size of the Hyperstriatum ventrale Is the Best Predictor of Feeding Innovation Rate in Birds , 2000, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[85] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Validity of the Differential Aptitude Test for the Assessment of Immigrant Children , 2000 .
[86] R. Deaner,et al. Comparative Tests of Primate Cognition: Different Scaling Methods Produce Different Results , 2000, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[87] B Anderson,et al. The g factor in non-human animals. , 2000, Novartis Foundation symposium.
[88] Kim Hill,et al. A theory of human life history evolution: Diet, intelligence, and longevity , 2000 .
[89] J. P. Rushton,et al. Secular gains in IQ not related to the g factor and inbreeding depression — unlike Black-White diÄerences: A reply to Flynn , 1999 .
[90] A. Jensen,et al. The g factor , 1996, Nature.
[91] J. P. Rushton,et al. The “Jensen Effect” and the “Spearman-Jensen hypothesis” of Black-White IQ differences , 1998 .
[92] C. Allen,et al. Species of Mind: The Philosophy and Biology of Cognitive Ethology , 1997 .
[93] J. Nijenhuis,et al. Comparability of GATB scores for immigrants and majority group members: Some Dutch findings. , 1997 .
[94] R. Killiany,et al. Patterns of cognitive decline in aged rhesus monkeys , 1997, Behavioural Brain Research.
[95] T. Price,et al. Correlated evolution and independent contrasts. , 1997, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[96] L. Lefebvre,et al. Feeding innovations and forebrain size in birds , 1997, Animal Behaviour.
[97] Gerd Gigerenzer,et al. The modularity of social intelligence , 1997 .
[98] J. Ellers,et al. Life history evolution in , 1997 .
[99] R. Byrne,et al. Machiavellian intelligence II : extensions and evaluations , 1997 .
[100] L. Humphreys,et al. Seeing the forest from the trees: When predicting the behavior or status of groups, correlate means. , 1996 .
[101] Louis Lefebvre,et al. CHAPTER 6 – Is Social Learning an Adaptive Specialization? , 1996 .
[102] C. Brand,et al. The g Factor: General Intelligence and Its Implications , 1996 .
[103] L. Cosmides,et al. Mapping the mind: Origins of domain specificity: The evolution of functional organization , 1994 .
[104] L. Cosmides,et al. Mapping the mind: Origins of domain specificity: The evolution of functional organization , 1994 .
[105] R. Byrne. Do larger brains mean greater intelligence? , 1993, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[106] L. Cosmides,et al. The Adapted mind : evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture , 1992 .
[107] John E. Hunter,et al. Methods of Meta-Analysis: Correcting Error and Bias in Research Findings , 1991 .
[108] M. Pagel,et al. The comparative method in evolutionary biology , 1991 .
[109] T. M. Forrester,et al. Monkey versus human performance in the NCTR Operant Test Battery. , 1990, Neurotoxicology and teratology.
[110] John Tooby,et al. Evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture, part I: Theoretical considerations , 1989 .
[111] R. Byrne,et al. Machiavellian intelligence : social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys, apes, and humans , 1990 .
[112] M. Poli. Animal learning and intelligence , 1988 .
[113] R. Byrne,et al. Why creative intelligence is hard to find , 1988, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[114] K. Campbell,et al. Rates of Evolution , 1987 .
[115] J. Fodor. The Modularity of mind. An essay on faculty psychology , 1986 .
[116] T. Wynn. Piaget, stone tools and the evolution of human intelligence. , 1985, World archaeology.
[117] R. Byrne,et al. Tactical deception of familiar individuals in baboons (Papio ursinus) , 1985, Animal Behaviour.
[118] E. Macphail. Vertebrate intelligence: the null hypothesis , 1985 .
[119] J. Felsenstein. Phylogenies and the Comparative Method , 1985, The American Naturalist.
[120] J. Fodor,et al. The Modularity of Mind: An Essay on Faculty Psychology , 1984 .
[121] S. G. Vandenberg,et al. Group differences and first principal-component loadings in the Hawaii family study of cognition: a test of the generality of ‘Spearman's hypothesis’ , 1984 .
[122] W. Hodos,et al. Some Perspectives on the Evolution of Intelligence and the Brain , 1982 .
[123] A. Jensen,et al. Race, social class and ability patterns on the WISC-R. , 1982 .
[124] J. Everett,et al. Factor Comparability And The Advantages Of Multiple Group Factor Analysis , 1980 .
[125] R. J. Smith. Rethinking allometry. , 1980, Journal of theoretical biology.
[126] Opportunism and the rise of intelligence , 1978 .
[127] Sue Taylor Parker,et al. Object manipulation, tool use and sensorimotor intelligence as feeding adaptations in cebus monkeys and great apes , 1977 .
[128] N. Humphrey. The Social Function of Intellect , 1976 .
[129] A. Jensen,et al. Educability and group differences , 1974, Nature.
[130] J. Felsenstein. Maximum-likelihood estimation of evolutionary trees from continuous characters. , 1973, American journal of human genetics.
[131] G. Romanes. Mental Evolution in Man: Origin of Human Faculty , 1970 .
[132] William Hodos,et al. Scala naturae: Why there is no theory in comparative psychology. , 1969 .
[133] M. Bitterman. THE EVOLUTION OF INTELLIGENCE. , 1965, Scientific American.
[134] S. Washburn. Speculations on the interrelations of the history of tools and biological evolution. , 1959, Human biology.
[135] E. Brunswik,et al. The Conceptual Framework of Psychology , 1954 .
[136] C. Spearman. The Abilities of Man their Nature and Measurement , 2020, Nature.
[137] J. Stevens,et al. Animal Intelligence , 1883, Nature.
[138] P. Pye-Smith. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex , 1871, Nature.