
Articles
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2 months ago |
dailybulletin.com.au | Scarlett Howard
Picture writing the numbers 1 to 5 in a horizontal line, from smallest to largest. Where did you put 1? If you placed 1 on the left and 5 on the right, you share this preference with most humans. Humans are not alone in this preference. Some other primates, and even some birds, also order small-to-large quantities from left to right. Although, some animals do prefer to order quantities from right to left. This is known as the mental number line, and it shows how brains typically organise information.
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2 months ago |
phys.org | Scarlett Howard |Adrian G. Dyer
Picture writing the numbers 1 to 5 in a horizontal line, from smallest to largest. Where did you put 1? If you placed 1 on the left and 5 on the right, you share this preference with most humans. Humans are not alone in this preference.
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2 months ago |
theconversation.com | Scarlett Howard |Adrian G. Dyer
Picture writing the numbers 1 to 5 in a horizontal line, from smallest to largest. Where did you put 1? If you placed 1 on the left and 5 on the right, you share this preference with most humans. Humans are not alone in this preference. Some other primates, and even some birds, also order small-to-large quantities from left to right. Although, some animals do prefer to order quantities from right to left. This is known as the mental number line, and it shows how brains typically organise information.
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Apr 8, 2024 |
cell.com | Byrne R.W |Scarlett Howard |Andrew Barron
SummaryThe thriving field of comparative cognition examines the behaviour of diverse animals in cognitive terms. Comparative cognition research has primarily focused on the abilities of animals — what tasks they can do — rather than on the limits of their cognition — tasks that exceed an animal’s cognitive abilities. We propose that understanding and identifying cognitive limits is as important as demonstrating the capacities of animal minds.
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Jan 18, 2024 |
dailybulletin.com.au | Scarlett Howard
If you’ve ever been tricked by a visual illusion, you know the feeling of disconnect between what your eyes perceive and what is actually there. Visual illusions occur due to errors in our perception, causing us to misperceive certain characteristics of objects or scenes. As it turns out, many non-human animals also experience these effects, including illusions of item size, brightness, colour, shape, orientation, motion or quantity.
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Happy Easter 🐰 https://t.co/GVAkqrGdmD

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Thank you ❤️ it certainly has been hellish 🥲

@ScarlettSHoward Jeepers, Scarlett!! That was a tough, but interesting listen. Great to hear that you e made progress and can only wish you the very best with your continuing attempts to be pain free.