Introduction; Comparative Cognition: A Natural Science Approach to the Study of Animal Intelligence, Edward A. Wasserman and Thomas R. Zentall; I. Perception and Illusion; 1 Grouping and Segmentation of Visual Objects by Baboons (Papio papio) and Humans (Homo sapiens), Joel Fagot and Isabelle Barbet; 2 Seeing What Is Not There: Illusion, Completion, and Spatio-Temporal Boundary Formation in Comparative Perspective, Kazuo Fujita; 3 The Cognitive Chicken: Visual and Spatial Cognition in a Non-Mammalian Brain, Giorgio Vallortigara; 4 The Comparative Psychology of Absolute Pitch, Ronald G. Weisman, Mitchel T. Williams, Jerome S. Cohen, Milan G. Njegovan, and Christopher B. Sturdy; II. Attention and Search; 5 Reaction-Time Explorations of Visual Perception, Attention, and Decision in Pigeons, Donald S. Blough; 6 Selective Attention, Priming, and Foraging Behavior, Alan C. Kamil and Alan B. Bond; 7 Attention as it is Manifest across Species, David A. Washburn and Lauren A. Taglialatela; III. Memory Processes; 8 The Questions of Temporal and Spatial Displacement in Animal Cognition, William A. Roberts; 9 Memory Processing, Anthony A. Wright; IV. Spatial Cognition; 10 Arthropod Navigation: Ants, Bees, Crabs, Spiders Finding Their Way, Ken Cheng; 11 Comparative Spatial Cognition: Processes in Landmark and Surface-Based Place Finding, Marcia L. Spetch and Debbie M. Kelly; 12 Properties of Time-Place Learning, Donald M. Wilkie and Christina M. Thorpe; V. Timing and Counting; 13 Behavioristic, Cognitive, Biological, and Quantitative Explanations of Timing, Russell M. Church; 14 Sensitivity to Time: Implications for the Representation of Time, Jonathon D. Crystal; 15 Time and Number: Learning, Psychophysics, Stimulus Control, and Retention, J. Gregor Fetterman; VI. Conceptualization and Categorization; 16 Relational Discrimination Learning in Pigeons, Robert G. Cook and Edward A. Wasserman; 17 A Modified Feature Theory as an Account of Pigeon Visual Categorization, Ludwig Huber and Ulrike Aust; 18 Category Structure and Typicality Effects, Masako Jitsumori; 19 Similarity and Difference in the Conceptual Systems of Primates: The Unobservability Hypothesis, Jennifer Vonk and Daniel J. Povinelli; 20 Rule Learning, Memorization Strategies, Switching Attention Between Local and Global Levels of Perception, and Optimality in Avian Visual Categorization, Charles P. Shimp, Walter T. Herbranson, Thane Fremouw, Alyson L. Froehlich; 21 Responses and Acquired Equivalence Classes, Peter J. Urcuioli; VII. Pattern Learning; 22 Spatial Patterns: Behavioral Control and Cognitive Representation, Michael F. Brown; 23 The Structure of Sequential Behavior, Stephen B. Fountain; 24 Truly Random Operant Responding: Results & Reasons, Greg Jensen, Claire Miller, and Allen Neuringer; 25 The Simultaneous Chain: A New Look at Serially Organized Behavior, Herbert S. Terrace; VIII. Tool Fabrication and Use; 26 Cognitive Adaptations for Tool-Related Behaviour in New Caledonian Crows, Alex Kacelnik, Jackie Chappell, Ben Kenward, and Alex A. S. Weir; 27 What is Challenging About Tool Use? The Capuchin’s Perspective, Elisabetta Visalberghi and Dorothy Fragaszy; IX. Problem Solving and Behavioral Flexibility; 28 Intelligences and Brains: An Evolutionary Bird’s Eye View, Juan D. Delius and Julia A. M. Delius; 29 How Do Dolphins Solve Problems?, Stan A. Kuczaj II and Rachel Thames Walker; 30 The Comparative Cognition of Caching, S. R. de Kort, S. Tebbich, J. M. Dally, N. J. Emery, and N. S. Clayton; 31 The Neural Basis of Cognitive Flexibility in Birds, Shigeru Watanabe; X. Social Cognition Processes; 32 Chimpanzee Social Cognition in Early Life: Comparative-Developmental Perspective, Masaki Tomonaga, Masako Myowa-Yamakoshi, Yuu Mizuno, Sanae Okamoto, Masami K. Yamaguchi, Daisuke Kosugi, Kim A. Bard, Masayuki Tanaka, and Tetsuro Matsuzawa; 33 Stimuli Signaling Rewards that Follow a Less Preferred Event are Themselves Preferred: Implications for Cognitive Dissonance, Thomas R. Zentall, Tricia S. Clement, Andrea M. Friedrich, and Kelly A. DiGian; Epilogue:; Postscript: An Essay on the Study of Cognition in Animals Stewart M. Hulse
Trade Policy 买家须知
- 关于产品:
- ● 正版保障:本网站隶属于中国国际图书贸易集团公司,确保所有图书都是100%正版。
- ● 环保纸张:进口图书大多使用的都是环保轻型张,颜色偏黄,重量比较轻。
- ● 毛边版:即书翻页的地方,故意做成了参差不齐的样子,一般为精装版,更具收藏价值。
关于退换货:
- 由于预订产品的特殊性,采购订单正式发订后,买方不得无故取消全部或部分产品的订购。
- 由于进口图书的特殊性,发生以下情况的,请直接拒收货物,由快递返回:
- ● 外包装破损/发错货/少发货/图书外观破损/图书配件不全(例如:光盘等)
并请在工作日通过电话400-008-1110联系我们。
- 签收后,如发生以下情况,请在签收后的5个工作日内联系客服办理退换货:
- ● 缺页/错页/错印/脱线
关于发货时间:
- 一般情况下:
- ●【现货】 下单后48小时内由北京(库房)发出快递。
- ●【预订】【预售】下单后国外发货,到货时间预计5-8周左右,店铺默认中通快递,如需顺丰快递邮费到付。
- ● 需要开具发票的客户,发货时间可能在上述基础上再延后1-2个工作日(紧急发票需求,请联系010-68433105/3213);
- ● 如遇其他特殊原因,对发货时间有影响的,我们会第一时间在网站公告,敬请留意。
关于到货时间:
- 由于进口图书入境入库后,都是委托第三方快递发货,所以我们只能保证在规定时间内发出,但无法为您保证确切的到货时间。
- ● 主要城市一般2-4天
- ● 偏远地区一般4-7天
关于接听咨询电话的时间:
- 010-68433105/3213正常接听咨询电话的时间为:周一至周五上午8:30~下午5:00,周六、日及法定节假日休息,将无法接听来电,敬请谅解。
- 其它时间您也可以通过邮件联系我们:customer@readgo.cn,工作日会优先处理。
关于快递:
- ● 已付款订单:主要由中通、宅急送负责派送,订单进度查询请拨打010-68433105/3213。
本书暂无推荐
本书暂无推荐