Rachael C Shaw
educated at: University of Cambridge
occupation: researcher
award received: Rutherford Discovery Fellowship
Articles 19
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Memory Performance Influences Male Reproductive Success in a Wild Bird
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Memory Performance Influences Male Reproductive Success in a Wild Bird
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The ontogeny of food-caching behaviour in New Zealand robins (Petroica longipes).
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How does cognition shape social relationships?
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Male New Zealand robins (Petroica longipes) cater to their mate's desire when sharing food in the wild
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Cognitive test batteries in animal cognition research: evaluating the past, present and future of comparative psychometrics.
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Desire-state attribution: Benefits of a novel paradigm using the food-sharing behavior of Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius)
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Testing cognition in the wild: factors affecting performance and individual consistency in two measures of avian cognition.
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Can you teach an old parrot new tricks? Cognitive development in wild kaka (Nestor meridionalis).
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Wild psychometrics: evidence for ‘general’ cognitive performance in wild New Zealand robins, Petroica longipes
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The evolution of self-control
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Nest destruction elicits indiscriminate con- versus heterospecific brood parasitism in a captive bird
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Can male Eurasian jays disengage from their own current desire to feed the female what she wants?
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Pilfering Eurasian jays use visual and acoustic information to locate caches.
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Thinking with their trunks: elephants use smell but not sound to locate food and exclude nonrewarding alternatives
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Evidence suggesting that desire-state attribution may govern food sharing in Eurasian jays
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Exclusion in corvids: the performance of food-caching Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius).
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Careful cachers and prying pilferers: Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius) limit auditory information available to competitors.
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Eurasian jays, Garrulus glandarius, flexibly switch caching and pilfering tactics in response to social context
Human - wd:Q57033911