All Stories

  1. Domestication and breeding objective did not shape the interpretation of physical and social cues in goats (Capra hircus)
  2. Comparative Cognition Needs Big Team Science: How Large-Scale Collaborations Will Unlock the Future of the Field
  3. Editorial: Using gaze to study social knowledge: current challenges and future directions
  4. The use of gaze to study cognition: limitations, solutions, and applications to animal welfare
  5. Toward assessing the role of dietary fatty acids in lamb's neurological and cognitive development
  6. Editorial: Captive animal behavior: Individual differences in learning and cognition, and implications on animal welfare
  7. Opportunities (and challenges) in dairy cattle cognition research: A key area needed to design future high welfare housing systems
  8. Seven steps to enhance Open Science practices in animal science
  9. The Academic, Societal and Animal Welfare Benefits of Open Science for Animal Science
  10. Open Science & Goats
  11. Responsiveness of domesticated goats towards various stressors following long-term cognitive test exposure
  12. Goats (Capra hircus) From Different Selection Lines Differ in Their Behavioural Flexibility
  13. Opportunities (and challenges) in dairy cattle cognition research: A key area needed to design future high welfare housing systems
  14. Horses’ (Equus caballus) Ability to Solve Visible but Not Invisible Displacement Tasks Is Associated With Frustration Behavior and Heart Rate
  15. Animal Emotions—Do Animals Feel as We Do?
  16. The academic, societal and animal welfare benefits of Open Science for animal science
  17. Goats (Capra hircus) from different selection lines differ in their behavioural flexibility
  18. Horses’ (Equus caballus) performance in visible and invisible displacement tasks is expressed in frustration behavior and heart rate
  19. Performance of goats in a detour and a problem-solving test following long-term cognitive test exposure
  20. Editorial: Humans in an Animal's World—How Non-human Animals Perceive and Interact With Humans
  21. The Status and Value of Replications in Animal Behavior Science
  22. The legislative, ethical, and conceptual importance of replicability in farm animal welfare science
  23. Goats show higher behavioural flexibility than sheep in a spatial detour task
  24. Goats work for food in a contrafreeloading task
  25. Current state of knowledge on the cognitive capacities of goats and its potential to inform species-specific enrichment
  26. Emotional contagion and its implications for animal welfare
  27. Goats Follow Human Pointing Gestures in an Object Choice Task
  28. Long-Term Socialization with Humans Affects Human-Directed Behavior in Goats
  29. Goats follow human pointing gestures in an object choice task
  30. Social Referencing in the Domestic Horse
  31. The legislative, ethical, and conceptual importance of replicability in farm animal welfare science.
  32. Editorial: Advances and Perspectives in Farm Animal Learning and Cognition
  33. Farm Animal Cognition—Linking Behavior, Welfare and Ethics
  34. Advances and Perspectives in Farm Animal Learning and Cognition
  35. Looking on the Bright Side of Livestock Emotions—the Potential of Their Transmission to Promote Positive Welfare
  36. Shape But Not Color Facilitates Two-Year-Olds’ Search Performance in a Spatial Rotation Task
  37. Human-directed behaviour in goats is not affected by short-term positive handling
  38. The repeatability of cognitive performance: a meta-analysis
  39. Goats prefer positive human emotional facial expressions
  40. Human Demonstration Does Not Facilitate the Performance of Horses (Equus caballus) in a Spatial Problem-Solving Task
  41. Human Demonstration Does not Facilitate the Performance of Horses (Equus caballus) in a Spatial Problem-Solving Task
  42. Perceptual lateralization of vocal stimuli in goats
  43. Swine Cognition
  44. Motor asymmetry in goats during a stepping task
  45. Taking Livestock Psychology Back to the Barn
  46. African penguins follow the gaze direction of conspecifics
  47. Human head orientation and eye visibility as indicators of attention for goats (Capra hircus)
  48. Invited review: Socio-cognitive capacities of goats and their impact on human-animal interactions
  49. Individual personality differences in goats predict their performance in visual learning and non-associative cognitive tasks
  50. Goats learn socially from humans in a spatial problem-solving task
  51. The Effects of Visual Discriminability and Rotation Angle on 30-Month-Olds’ Search Performance in Spatial Rotation Tasks
  52. Judgement bias in goats (Capra hircus): investigating the effects of human grooming
  53. Goats display audience-dependent human-directed gazing behaviour in a problem-solving task
  54. Are domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) able to use complex human-given cues to find a hidden reward?
  55. ‘Goats that stare at men’—revisited: do dwarf goats alter their behaviour in response to eye visibility and head direction of a human?
  56. Object permanence in the dwarf goat (Capra aegagrus hircus): Perseveration errors and the tracking of complex movements of hidden objects
  57. Domestic pigs’ (Sus scrofa domestica) use of direct and indirect visual and auditory cues in an object choice task
  58. ‘Goats that stare at men’: dwarf goats alter their behaviour in response to human head orientation, but do not spontaneously use head direction as a cue in a food-related context
  59. Exclusion Performance in Dwarf Goats (Capra aegagrus hircus) and Sheep (Ovis orientalis aries)
  60. Do young domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) rely on object-specific cues in a simultaneous discrimination task?
  61. Do young domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) rely on object-specific cues in a simultaneous discrimination task?
  62. Juvenile domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) use human-given cues in an object choice task
  63. Are juvenile domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) sensitive to the attentive states of humans?—The impact of impulsivity on choice behaviour
  64. Great Apes' Risk-Taking Strategies in a Decision Making Task
  65. No evidence for visual context-dependency of olfactory learning in Drosophila