![]() | Taylor, A. H., Elliffe, D., Hunt, G. R., Gray, R. D. 2010. Complex cognition and behavioural innovation in New Caledonian crows. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 277: 2637–2643. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Gray, R. D. 2009. Animal cognition: Aesop's fable flies from fiction to fact. Current Biology 19: R731–R732. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Hunt, G. R., Gray, R. D. 2012. Context-dependent tool use in New Caledonian crows. Biology Letters 8: 205–207. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Hunt, G. R., Holzhaider, J. C., Gray, R. D. 2007. Spontaneous metatool use by New Caledonian crows. Current Biology 17: 1504–1507. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Hunt, G. R., Medina, F. S., Gray, R. D. 2009. Do New Caledonian crows solve physical problems through causal reasoning?. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 276: 247–254. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Johnston, M. 2024. How do animals understand the physical world?. Current Biology 34: R996–R999. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Knaebe, B., Gray, R. D. 2012. An end to insight? New Caledonian crows can spontaneously solve problems without planning their actions. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 279: 4977–81. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Medina, F. S., Holzhaider, J. C., Hearne, L. J., Hunt, G. R., Gray, R. D. 2010. An investigation into the cognition behind spontaneous string pulling in New Caledonian crows. PLoS One 5: e9345. |
![]() | Taylor, A. H., Miller, R., Gray, R. D. 2012. New Caledonian crows reason about hidden causal agents. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109: 16389–16391. |
![]() | Taylor, A. M., Reby, D., McComb, K. 2009. Context-related variation in the vocal growling behaviour of the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). Ethology 115: 905–915. |
![]() | Taylor, A. M., Reby, D., McComb, K. 2010. Size communication in domestic dog, Canis familiaris, growls. Animal Behaviour 79: 205–210. |
![]() | Taylor, C. H., Watson, D. J. G., Gilbert, F., Pritchard, D. J., Skelhorn, J., Reader, T. 2026. Unlearned responses of chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, towards aposematic insect-like stimuli. Animal Behaviour 233: 123479. |
![]() | Taylor, D., Clay, Z., Dahl, C. D., Zuberbühler, K., Davila-Ross, M., Dezecache, G. 2022. Vocal functional flexibility: what it is and why it matters. Animal Behaviour 186: 93–100. |
![]() | Taylor, D., Hartmann, D., Dezecache, G., Te Wong, S., Davila-Ross, M. 2019. Facial complexity in sun bears: Exact facial mimicry and social sensitivity. Scientific Reports 9: 4961. |
![]() | Taylor, L. A., Cross, F. R., Jackson, R. R. 2025. Mate choice as a third context in which a mosquito-specialist jumping spider attends to red-coloured cues. Royal Society Open Science 12: 251953. |
![]() | Taylor, L. A., Maier, E. B., Byrne, K. J., Amin, Z., Morehouse, N. I. 2014. Colour use by tiny predators: jumping spiders show colour biases during foraging. Animal Behaviour 90: 149–157. |
![]() | Taylor, R. C. 2017. Sensory biology: How female treefrogs pick mates at a noisy party. Current Biology 27: R188–R190. |
![]() | Taylor, R. C., Klein, B. A., Stein, J., Ryan, M. J. 2008. Faux frogs: multimodal signalling and the value of robotics in animal behaviour. Animal Behaviour 76: 1089–1097. |
![]() | Tchabovsky, A. V., Surkova, E. N., Savinetskaya, L. E. 2024. Multi-assay approach shows species-associated personality patterns in two socially distinct gerbil species. PLoS One 19: e0296214. |
![]() | Tchernichovski, O., Conley, D. 2019. A genetically tailored education for birds. Nature 575: 290–291. |
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