All Stories

  1. Effects of sex and early rearing condition on adult behavior, health, and well-being in captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  2. Bringing the Real World Into Developmental Science: A Commentary on Weber, Fernald, and Diop (2017)
  3. Nurturing of skills in infancy positively impacts the brain of adult chimpanzees
  4. The Myth of Universal Sensitive Responsiveness: Comment on Mesman et al. (2017)
  5. Understanding the meaning and use of a communicative signal
  6. The field of Comparative Psychology has serious problems
  7. Dyadic interactions, attachment and the presence of triadic interactions in chimpanzees and humans
  8. Tickling
  9. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) Produce the Same Types of ‘Laugh Faces’ when They Emit Laughter and when They Are Silent
  10. Long-term effects of infant attachment organization on adult behavior and health in nursery-reared, captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  11. The Importance of Development for Comparative Primatology
  12. Playful expressions of one-year-old chimpanzee infants in social and solitary play contexts
  13. Emotional engagements predict and enhance social cognition in young chimpanzees
  14. Triggering social interactions: chimpanzees respond to imitation by a humanoid robot and request responses from it
  15. Gestures and social-emotional communicative development in chimpanzee infants
  16. Apes communicate about absent and displaced objects: methodology matters
  17. The Stability of Facial Attractiveness: Is It What You’ve Got or What You Do with It?
  18. Chimpanzee Social Cognition in Early LifeComparative–Developmental Perspective
  19. Eliciting caregiving behavior in dyadic human-robot attachment-like interactions
  20. Emotional body language displayed by artificial agents
  21. Effects of cage mesh on pointing: hand shapes in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  22. Aping expressions? Chimpanzees produce distinct laugh types when responding to laughter of others.
  23. Apes Communicate about Absent and Displaced Objects: Methodology Matters
  24. Towards an Affect Space for robots to display emotional body language
  25. BIZARRE chimpanzees do not represent “the chimpanzee”
  26. Bolder, happier, smarter: The role of extraversion in positive mood and cognition
  27. Neurobehavioural integrity of chimpanzee newborns: comparisons across groups and across species reveal gene-environment interaction effects
  28. Human Rights, Animal Wrongs? Exploring Attitudes toward Animal Use and Possibilities for Change
  29. Autonomous Development of Social Referencing Skills
  30. Social Cognition: Evolutionary History of Emotional Engagements with Infants
  31. Assessing human reactions to different robot attachment profiles
  32. Science versus Human Welfare? Understanding Attitudes toward Animal Use
  33. Chimpanzee Social Cognition in Early Life: Comparative–Developmental Perspective
  34. Enhancement of attachment and cognitive development of young nursery-reared chimpanzees in responsive versus standard care
  35. The Influence of Social Interaction on the Perception of Emotional Expression: A Case Study with a Robot Head
  36. Learning from Animals?
  37. Measurement of eye-gaze in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  38. "Intramuscular electrical stimulation of facial muscles in humans and chimpanzees: Duchenne revisited and extended": Correction to Waller et al. (2006).
  39. Classifying chimpanzee facial expressions using muscle action.
  40. Perceived differences between chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and human (Homo sapiens) facial expressions are related to emotional interpretation.
  41. Neonatal imitation in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) tested with two paradigms
  42. A Cross-species Comparison of Facial Morphology and Movement in Humans and Chimpanzees Using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS)
  43. Self-Awareness in Human and Chimpanzee Infants: What Is Measured and What Is Meant by the Mark and Mirror Test?
  44. Development of Emotional Expressions in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  45. Intramuscular electrical stimulation of facial muscles in humans and chimpanzees: Duchenne revisited and extended.
  46. Understanding the Point of Chimpanzee Pointing
  47. Maternal gestures with 20-month-old infants in two contexts
  48. Group differences in the mutual gaze of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  49. Emotions in chimpanzee infants: the value of a comparative developmental approach to understand the evolutionary bases of emotion
  50. Development of social cognition in infant chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): Face recognition, smiling, gaze, and the lack of triadic interactions1
  51. What is the evolutionary basis for colic?
  52. Should developmental psychologists imitate comparative psychologists?
  53. Developmental processes in empathy
  54. Assessment of the caregiving environment and infant functioning in polydrug families: Use of a Structured Clinical Interview
  55. Développement neurobiologique et émotions chez les nouveau-nés chimpanzés et humains
  56. A longitudinal study of hand preference in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  57. A longitudinal study of hand preference in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  58. The effects of prenatal drug exposure, term status, and caregiving on arousal and arousal modulation in 8-week-old infants
  59. Orangutan use of vertical space in an innovative habitat
  60. Attentional Response at Eight Weeks in Prenatally Drug-Exposed and Preterm Infants
  61. Reaching into Thought: The Minds of the Great Apes
  62. Imitation and mirror self-recognition may be developmental precursors to theory of mind in human and nonhuman primates
  63. Neonatal neurobehavioral correlates of lateral bias and affect in infant chimpanzees (pan troglodytes)
  64. The roles of development and emotionality on lateral bias and hemispheric asymmetry: Introduction to the special section ofdevelopmental neuropsychology
  65. The Influence of Siblings On Wild Infant Chimpanzee Social Interaction
  66. Social referencing by young chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  67. Indexical and referential pointing in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  68. Imitative learning of artificial fruit processing in children (Homo sapiens) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  69. Indexical and referential pointing in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  70. Les bases évolutionnistes de l'imitation : aspects sociaux, cognitifs et développementaux des processus imitatifs chez les primates non humains
  71. Precision grips in young chimpanzees
  72. Sensorimotor cognition in young feral orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus)
  73. Asymmetric grasping response in neonate chimpanzees (pan troglodytes)
  74. Development of visual acuity in infant chimpanzees
  75. Asymmetries in spontaneous head orientation in infant chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  76. Can Young Chimpanzees (Pan Troglodytes) Imitate Arbitrary Actions? Hayes & Hayes (1952) Revisited
  77. Asymmetries in spontaneous head orientaton in infant chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  78. Evolutionary roots of intuitive parenting: Maternal competence in chimpanzees
  79. Developmental issues in the evolution of the mind.
  80. Developmental issues in the evolution of the mind.
  81. A developmental theory requires developmental data
  82. Hemispheric specialization in infant chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): Evidence for a relation with gender and arousal
  83. Cognitive competence underlying tool use in free-ranging orang-utans
  84. The Ontogeny of Lateralized Behavior in Nonhuman Primates with Special Reference to Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  85. Intentional Behavior and Intentional Communication in Young Free-Ranging Orangutans
  86. Intentional Behavior and Intentional Communication in Young Free-Ranging Orangutans
  87. Development of self-recognition in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  88. Development of self-recognition in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  89. Orientation to social and nonsocial stimuli in neonatal chimpanzees and humans
  90. Lateral bias in infant chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
  91. Behavioral Responsiveness to Strangers in Young Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  92. Observational learning of tool-use by young chimpanzees
  93. Behavioral Responsiveness of Young Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) to a Novel Environment
  94. The communicative context of object manipulation in ape and human adult-infant pairs
  95. Development of manipulations with objects in ape and human infants
  96. The effect of peer separation in young chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
  97. CHAPTER FOURTEEN. Emotional Engagement: How Chimpanzee Minds Develop
  98. Understanding reflections of self and other objects
  99. Similarities and Differences in the Neonatal Behavior of Chimpanzee and Human Infants
  100. The comparative and developmental study of self-recognition and imitation: The importance of social factors
  101. “Social tool use” by free-ranging orangutans: A Piagetian and developmental perspective on the manipulation of an animate object