Year |
Citation |
Score |
2023 |
Malassis R, Seed AM. Do they know or just do it? Investigating implicit and explicit sequence learning by capuchin monkeys, human adults and children. Consciousness and Cognition. 114: 103557. PMID 37579700 DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2023.103557 |
0.467 |
|
2020 |
Malassis R, Fagot J. Extraction of structural regularities by baboons (Papio Papio): Adjacent and nonadjacent repetition patterns differ in learnability. Journal of Comparative Psychology (Washington, D.C. : 1983). PMID 32496080 DOI: 10.1037/Com0000238 |
0.44 |
|
2020 |
Malassis R, Dehaene S, Fagot J. Baboons (Papio papio) Process a Context-Free but Not a Context-Sensitive Grammar. Scientific Reports. 10: 7381. PMID 32355252 DOI: 10.1038/S41598-020-64244-5 |
0.415 |
|
2019 |
Fagot J, Boë LJ, Berthomier F, Claidière N, Malassis R, Meguerditchian A, Rey A, Montant M. The baboon: A model for the study of language evolution. Journal of Human Evolution. 126: 39-50. PMID 30583843 DOI: 10.1016/J.Jhevol.2018.10.006 |
0.627 |
|
2018 |
Rey A, Minier L, Malassis R, Bogaerts L, Fagot J. Regularity Extraction Across Species: Associative Learning Mechanisms Shared by Human and Non-Human Primates. Topics in Cognitive Science. PMID 29785844 DOI: 10.1111/Tops.12343 |
0.351 |
|
2018 |
Malassis R, Rey A, Fagot J. Non-adjacent Dependencies Processing in Human and Non-human Primates. Cognitive Science. PMID 29781135 DOI: 10.1111/Cogs.12617 |
0.696 |
|
2017 |
Fagot J, Malassis R, Medam T. The processing of positional information in a two-item sequence limits the emergence of symmetry in baboons (Papio papio), but not in humans (Homo sapiens). Learning & Behavior. PMID 28779389 DOI: 10.3758/S13420-017-0290-1 |
0.404 |
|
2015 |
Malassis R, Delfour F. Sea lions' (Zalophus californianus) use of human pointing gestures as referential cues. Learning & Behavior. 43: 101-12. PMID 25678395 DOI: 10.3758/S13420-014-0165-7 |
0.395 |
|
2015 |
Defolie C, Malassis R, Serre M, Meunier H. Tufted capuchins (Cebus apella) adapt their communicative behaviour to human's attentional states. Animal Cognition. 18: 747-55. PMID 25630371 DOI: 10.1007/S10071-015-0841-9 |
0.34 |
|
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