![]() | Smet, A. F., Byrne, R. W. 2014. Interpretation of human pointing by African elephants: generalisation and rationality. Animal Cognition 17: 1365–1374. |
![]() | Smet, A. F., Byrne, R. W. 2020. African elephants interpret a trunk gesture as a clue to direction of interest. Current Biology 30: R926–R927. |
![]() | Smet, Anna F., Byrne, Richard W. 2013. African elephants can use human pointing cues to find hidden food. Current Biology 23: 2033–2037. |
![]() | Smirnova, A. A., Cheplakova, M. A., Kubenko, K. N. 2025. Some Hooded crows (Corvus cornix) understand how a loose string works. Scientific Reports 15: 15569. |
![]() | Smirnova, A., Zorina, Z., Obozova, T., Wasserman, E. 2015. Crows spontaneously exhibit analogical reasoning. Current Biology 25: 256–260. |
![]() | Smiseth, P. T., Darwell, C. T., Moore, A. J. 2003. Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 270: 1773–1777. |
![]() | Smit, J. A. H., van Oers, K. 2019. Personality types vary in their personal and social information use. Animal Behaviour 151: 185–193. |
![]() | Smit, N. 2024. Hierarchies inferred from different agonistic behaviours are not always comparable. Journal of Animal Ecology 93: 1947–1959. |
![]() | Smit, N., Robbins, M. M. 2025. Female mountain gorillas can outrank non-alpha males. Current Biology 35: 4028–4034.e3. |
![]() | Smith, A. A., Hölldober, B., Liebig, J. 2009. Cuticular hydrocarbons reliably identify cheaters and allow enforcement of altruism in a social insect. Current Biology 19: 78–81. |
![]() | Smith, A. A., Millar, J. G., Hanks, L. M., Suarez, A. V. 2012. Experimental evidence that workers recognize reproductives through cuticular hydrocarbons in the ant Odontomachus brunneus. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 66: 1267–1276. |
![]() | Smith, A. E., Dalecki, S. J., Crystal, J. D. 2017. A test of the reward-value hypothesis. Animal Cognition 20: 215–220. |
![]() | Smith, A. P., Zentall, T. R., Kacelnik, A. 2018. Midsession reversal task with pigeons: Parallel processing of alternatives explains choices. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition 44: 272. |
![]() | Smith, A. R., Seid, M. A., Jiménez, L. C., Wcislo, W. T. 2010. Socially induced brain development in a facultatively eusocial sweat bee Megalopta genalis (Halictidae). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 277: 2157–2163. |
![]() | Smith, A. T., Dobson, F. S. 2022. Social complexity in plateau pikas, Ochotona curzoniae. Animal Behaviour 184: 27–41. |
![]() | Smith, A. V., Proops, L., Grounds, K., Wathan, J., McComb, K. 2016. Functionally relevant responses to human facial expressions of emotion in the domestic horse (Equus caballus). Biology Letters 12: 20150907. |
![]() | Smith, A. V., Proops, L., Grounds, K., Wathan, J., McComb, K. 2016. Horses give functionally relevant responses to human facial expressions of emotion: a response to Schmoll (2016). Biology Letters 12: 20160549. |
![]() | Smith, A. V., Wilson, C., McComb, K., Proops, L. 2018. Domestic horses (Equus caballus) prefer to approach humans displaying a submissive body posture rather than a dominant body posture. Animal Cognition 21: 307–312. |
![]() | Smith, A. V., Wilson, C., McComb, K., Proops, L. 2018. Author Correction: Domestic horses (Equus caballus) prefer to approach humans displaying a submissive body posture rather than a dominant body posture. Animal Cognition 21: 313–313. |
![]() | Smith, B. H. 2025. Cognition from genes to ecology: individual differences incognition and its potential role in a social network. Animal Cognition 28: 32. |
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