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Journal Article (146)
41.
Journal Article
11 (4), e0152979 (2016)
Shared cultural history as a predictor of political and economic changes among nation states. PLoS One 42.
Journal Article
6, 22776 (2016)
Adaptive bill morphology for enhanced tool manipulation in New Caledonian crows. Scientific Reports 43.
Journal Article
12 (2) (2016)
Does absolute brain size really predict self-control? Hand-tracking training improves performance on the A-not-B task. Biology Letters 44.
Journal Article
39 (January), e27 (2016)
Clarity and causality needed in claims about Big Gods. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45.
Journal Article
152 (15), pp. 2107 - 2125 (2015)
New Caledonian crows (Corvus moneduloides) attend to barb presence during pandanus tool manufacture and use. Behaviour 46.
Journal Article
10 (9), e0136783 (2015)
Pulotu: Database of Austronesian supernatural beliefs and practices. PLoS One 47.
Journal Article
282 (1813), 20150796 (2015)
No conclusive evidence that corvids can create novel causal interventions. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 48.
Journal Article
282 (1804), 20142556 (2015)
Broad supernatural punishment but not moralizing high gods precede the evolution of political complexity in Austronesia. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 49.
Journal Article
9 (7), e103049 (2014)
Modifications to the Aesop's fable paradigm change New Caledonian crow performances. PLoS One 50.
Journal Article
35 (4), pp. 309 - 318 (2014)
The sequential evolution of land tenure norms. Evolution and Human Behavior 51.
Journal Article
281 (1787), 20140837 (2014)
Of babies and birds: complex tool behaviours are not sufficient for the evolution of the ability to create a novel causal intervention. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 52.
Journal Article
30 (3), pp. 243 - 259 (2014)
Behavioural evolution in penguins does not reflect phylogeny. Cladistics 53.
Journal Article
9 (3), e92895 (2014)
Using the Aesop's fable paradigm to investigate causal understanding of water displacement by New Caledonian crows. PLoS One 54.
Journal Article
111 (47), pp. 16784 - 16789 (2014)
The ecology of religious beliefs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 55.
Journal Article
5 (6), pp. 693 - 703 (2014)
Is there a link between the crafting of tools and the evolution of cognition? Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science 56.
Journal Article
1, e110 (2013)
Perineuronal satellite neuroglia in the telencephalon of New Caledonian crows and other passeriformes: evidence of satellite glial cells in the central nervous system of healthy birds? PeerJ 57.
Journal Article
63 (7), pp. 524 - 535 (2013)
Toward a mechanistic understanding of linguistic diversity. Bioscience 58.
Journal Article
4 (1), pp. 128 - 133 (2013)
First shots fired for the phylogenetic revolution in religious studies (Human cultures are primarily adaptive at the group level). Cliodynamics: the journal of theoretical and mathematical history 59.
Journal Article
279 (1749), pp. 4977 - 4981 (2012)
An end to insight?: New Caledonian crows can spontaneously solve problems without planning their actions. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 60.
Journal Article
109 (40), pp. 16389 - 16391 (2012)
New Caledonian crows reason about hidden causal agents. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America