Inside of a Dog_ What Dogs See, Smell, and Know - Alexandra Horowitz [127]
on attending to a video projection:
Pongrácz, P., Á. Miklósi, A. Doka, and V. Csányi. 2003. Successful application of video-projected human images for signalling to dogs. Ethology, 109, 809–821.
on why commands relayed by speakers don't work:
Virányi, Zs., J. Topál, M. Gácsi, Á. Miklósi, and V. Csányi. 2004. Dogs can recognize the behavioural cues of the attentional focus in humans. Behavioural Processes, 66, 161–172.
CANINE ANTHROPOLOGISTS
"I am I …":
Stein, G. 1937. Everybody's Autobiography. New York: Random House, p. 64.
on autistic people using dogs to read others:
Sacks, O. 1995. An anthropologist on Mars. New York: Knopf.
on Clever Hans:
Sebeok, T. A., and R. Rosenthal, eds. 1981. The Clever Hans phenomenon: Communication with horses, whales, apes, and people. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
on dogs reading trainers' body movements:
Wright, 1982.
on dogs anticipating us on walks:
Kubinyi, E., Á. Miklósi, J. Topál, and V. Csányi. 2003. Social mimetic behaviour and social anticipation in dogs: Preliminary results. Animal Cognition, 6, 57–63.
on distinguishing threatening and friendly strangers:
Vas, J., J. Topál, M. Gácsi, Á. Miklósi, and V. Csányi. 2005. A friend or an enemy? Dogs' reaction to an unfamiliar person showing behavioural cues of threat and friendliness at different times. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 94, 99–115.
NOBLE MIND
on neophilia:
Kaulfuss, P., and D. S. Mills. 2008. Neophilia in domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and its implication for studies of dog cognition. Animal Cognition, 11, 553–556.
on physical cognition:
Miklósi, 2007.
on string-pulling:
Osthaus, B., S. E. G. Lea, and A. M. Slater. 2005. Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) fail to show understanding of means-end connections in a string-pulling task. Animal Cognition, 8, 37–47.
on use of social cues:
Erdohegyi, A., J. Topál, Zs. Virányi, and Á. Miklósi. 2007. Dog-logic: Inferential reasoning in a two-way choice task and its restricted use. Animal Behavior, 74, 725–737.
on dogs looking to humans to solve task:
Miklósi et al., 2003.
on milk-bottle tits:
Fisher, J., and R. A. Hinde. 1949. The opening of milk bottles by birds. British Birds, 42, 347–357.
on chickadees experiment:
Sherry, D. F., and B. G. Galef Jr. 1990. Social learning without imitation: More about milk bottle opening by birds. Animal Behaviour, 40, 987–989.
on detour learning:
Pongrácz, P., Á. Miklósi, K. Timar-Geng, and V. Csányi. 2004. Verbal attention getting as a key factor in social learning between dog (Canis familiaris) and human. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 118, 375–383.
on infant imitation:
Gergely, G., H. Bekkering, and I. Király. 2002. Rational imitation in preverbal infants. Nature, 415, 755.
Whiten, A., D. M. Custance, J-C. Gomez, P. Teixidor, and K. A. Bard. 1996. Imitative learning of artificial fruit processing in children (Homo sapiens) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Journal of Comparative Psychology, 110, 3–14.
on dog imitation:
Range, F., Zs. Virányi, and L. Huber. 2007. Selective imitation in domestic dogs. Current Biology, 17, 868–872.
on "do it" task:
Topál, J., R. W. Byrne, Á. Miklósi, and V. Csányi. 2006. Reproducing human actions and action sequences: "Do as I Do!" in a dog. Animal Cognition, 9, 355–367.
on theory of mind:
Premack, D., and G. Woodruff. 1978. Does a chimpanzee have a theory of mind? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1, 515–526.
on false belief test:
Wimmer, H., and J. Perner. 1983. Beliefs about beliefs: Representation and constraining function of wrong beliefs in young children's understanding of deception. Cognition, 13, 103–128.
on Philip, the dog who informs about the keys:
Topál, J., A. Erdõhegyi, R. Mányik, and Á. Miklósi. 2006. Mindreading in a dog: An adaptation of a primate