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A Chimpanzee’s (Pan troglodytes) Perception of Variations in Speech: Identification of Familiar Words when Whispered and When Spoken by a Variety of Talkers
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In: Heimbauer, Lisa A; Beran, Michael J; & Owren, Michael J. (2018). A Chimpanzee’s (Pan troglodytes) Perception of Variations in Speech: Identification of Familiar Words when Whispered and When Spoken by a Variety of Talkers. International Journal of Comparative Psychology. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/01t81345 (2018)
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A Longitudinal Assessment of Vocabulary Retention in Symbol-Competent Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
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In: Language Research Center (2015)
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A Longitudinal Assessment of Vocabulary Retention in Symbol-Competent Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
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Fading Perceptual Resemblance: A Path for Rhesus Macaques (Macaca mulatta) to Conceptual Matching?
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Implicit and Explicit Category Learning by Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus apella)
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Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) show the isolation effect during serial list recognition memory tests
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A Chimpanzee Recognizes Synthetic Speech With Significantly Reduced Acoustic Cues to Phonetic Content
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Use of Exclusion by a Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) During Speech Perception and Auditory-Visual Matching-to-Sample
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Abstract:
An adult female chimpanzee showed responding through use of exclusion in an auditory to visual matching-to-sample procedure. The chimpanzee had previously learned to associate specific visuographic symbols called lexigrams with real-world referents and the spoken English words and photographs for those referents. On some trials, an unknown spoken English word was presented as the sample, and the match choices could consist of photographs or lexigrams that already were associated with known English words as well as unknown lexigrams or photos of objects without associated lexigrams. The chimpanzee reliably avoided choosing known comparisons for these unknown samples, instead relying on exclusion to choose comparisons that were of unknown lexigrams or photographs of items without associated lexigram symbols.
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2834832 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20117192 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2010.01.009
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What Meaning Means for Same and Different: Analogical Reasoning in Humans (Homo sapiens), Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), and Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca mulatta)
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