Ljerka Ostojic

Affiliations: 
2011- Psychology University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom 
Area:
comparative psychology, comparative cognition, animal cognition, animal behaviour
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Parents

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Nicola Clayton grad student 2008-2012
Nicola Clayton post-doc 2011-

Children

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Rachel Crosby grad student 2016- Cambridge
Ben Farrar grad student 2017- Cambridge
Katharina Friederike Brecht grad student 2014-2017 Cambridge (PsychTree)
Piero Amodio grad student 2016-2020 Cambridge

Collaborators

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Edward Legg collaborator 2011- Cambridge
Michael T. Mendl collaborator 2011- University of Bristol
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Publications

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Farrar BG, Vernouillet A, Garcia-Pelegrin E, et al. (2023) Reporting and interpreting non-significant results in animal cognition research. Peerj. 11: e14963
Amodio P, Farrar BG, Krupenye C, et al. (2021) Little evidence that Eurasian jays protect their caches by responding to cues about a conspecific's desire and visual perspective. Elife. 10
Farrar BG, Ostojić L, Clayton NS. (2021) The hidden side of animal cognition research: Scientists' attitudes toward bias, replicability and scientific practice. Plos One. 16: e0256607
Amodio P, Brea J, Farrar BG, et al. (2021) Testing two competing hypotheses for Eurasian jays' caching for the future. Scientific Reports. 11: 835
Farrar BG, Altschul DM, Fischer J, et al. (2020) Trialling Meta-Research in Comparative Cognition: Claims and Statistical Inference in Animal Physical Cognition. Animal Behavior and Cognition. 7: 419-444
Farrar BG, Ostojić L. (2020) It's not just the animals that are STRANGE. Learning & Behavior
Amodio P, Fiorito G, Clayton NS, et al. (2019) Commentary: A Conserved Role for Serotonergic Neurotransmission in Mediating Social Behavior in Octopus. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 13: 185
Amodio P, Boeckle M, Schnell AK, et al. (2019) Shell Loss in Cephalopods: Trigger for, or By-Product of, the Evolution of Intelligence? A Reply to Mollo et al. Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Amodio P, Boeckle M, Schnell AK, et al. (2018) Grow Smart and Die Young: Why Did Cephalopods Evolve Intelligence? Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Farrar BG, Ostojić L. (2018) Does social distance modulate adults' egocentric biases when reasoning about false beliefs? Plos One. 13: e0198616
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