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The Thoughtful Animal

The Thoughtful Animal


Exploring the evolution and architecture of the mind
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    Jason G. Goldman Jason G. Goldman is a graduate student in developmental psychology at the University of Southern California, where he studies the evolutionary and developmental origins of the mind in humans and non-human animals. Jason is also an editor at ScienceSeeker and Editor of Open Lab 2010. He lives in Los Angeles, CA. Follow on . Follow on Twitter @jgold85.
  • Blogroll

  • Science Seeker Editor’s Selections: Music, Knowledge, Cortisol, Language

    Here are my Science Seeker Editor’s Selections: Why does music move us so? In her inaugural post at National Geographic’s new blog salon Phenomena, Virginia Hughes explores this question by discussing a fascinating new study. Is music just auditory cheesecake, or is there more to it? “One morning, I awoke convinced that science was the [...]

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    What Is Operant Conditioning? (and How Does It Explain Driving Dogs?)

    driving dog screenshot

    While second nature to many of us, driving a car is actually a fairly complex process. At its most stripped down version, first you sit in the driver’s seat, then you start the engine, then you shift into gear, and then you must simultaneously steer while keeping your foot on the gas pedal. That doesn’t [...]

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    Koalas and Bison Use the Same Rules for Choosing Mates

    koala

    While natural selection works operates over an individual’s ability to survive, sexual selection operates over an individual’s ability to mate and successfully sire offspring. In other words, sexual selection is a process through which individuals of a given species struggle to be more reproductively successful. It works in two primary ways, first identified by Charles [...]

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    ScienceSeeker Editor’s Selections: Dogs, Money, Sensation & Perception, NeuroNewtons, and DSM-5

    Here are my Science Seeker Editor’s Selections for the past week: Can Dogs Use Human Emotional Expressions to Identify Which Box Contains Food? New research from the Tomasello lab, ably covered at the Companion Animal Psychology blog. Can having more money make you a worse parent? At the Science of Relationships blog, Samantha Joel explains [...]

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    You’re Not As Special As You Think

    After being knocked out for a week by a flu (don’t procrastinate on those vaccines, like I did) and coming back to a veritable avalanche of new data and (American) Thanksgiving, things are a little busy around here. So, to keep you busy between carving up turkeys and decorating with gourds, and because I haven’t [...]

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    For Word Learning, Size Matters If You’re A Dog

    Gable and Toys

    In 1988, a three-year-old child is led into a brightly colored testing room in a psychology department in Bloomington, Indiana. A small toy is brought out and put onto a table in front of the child. The toy was wooden, blue, about two inches square, and U-shaped. “This is a dax.” The researchers picked a [...]

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    ScienceSeeker Editor’s Selections: Headaches, Turkey, Gratitude, and Dogs

    Here are my Science Seeker Editor’s Selections for the past week: At Mind Hacks, Vaughan Bell shares a beautiful work by art by Victorian cartoonist George Cruikshank: A devil of a headache. Does eating turkey really make you sleepy? In a short, fun video, Ferris Jabr explains the science of Thanksgiving tiredness. “As it turns [...]

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    Clever Captive Cockatoo Creates Tool, A First For His Species

    Cockatoo_tools_4_AUERSPERG

    A captive parrot in an Austrian research lab near Vienna has started using tools, adding to a complex story that began more than fifty years ago in the forests of Tanzania. “During three years in the Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve in Tanganyika, East Africa, I saw chimpanzees use natural objects as tools on many occasions,” [...]

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    ScienceSeeker Editor’s Selections: Election Day Edition

    Here are my Science Seeker Editor’s Selections for the past week, featuring election-day science: Stressed out waiting for the results? According to Scicurious, It’s not the stress that counts, it’s whether you can control it. Is it possible to predict how “undecided voters” will decide? Are they even really undecided to begin with? Melanie Tannenbaum [...]

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    ScienceSeeker Editor’s Selections: Replications, Illusory Faces, High Art, and Fridge Moms

    Here are my Science Seeker Editor’s Selections for the past week: This is a big deal, following a tough summer for the field: Psychological Science to publish direct replications (maybe). By Sanjay Srivastava. At BPS Research Digest, find out why paranormal believers and religious people are more prone to seeing faces that aren’t really there [...]

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