Free open access article from PLoS ONE! Word Generalization by a Dog http://t.co/jXv63DbVke
Free open access article from PLoS ONE! Word Generalization by a Dog http://t.co/jXv63DbVke
Erste Nachweise, dass Hunde Objekte nach Größe und Textur differenzieren, nicht nach der Form: http://t.co/GyYVVY5YF2
dog did not display human-like word comprehension, but word generalization& did not generalize to shape but to size http://t.co/WJboJyH3ls
Recent research suggests dogs associate words with object size and texture, rather than shape. http://t.co/NgHhmHNe c/o PLOS One
@tetrarchangel One for the next Animals podcast? Dogs tell objects apart by size, not shape: http://t.co/8WEN6UgE
@YvettePebles om du orkar, har du den rätta studien här: http://t.co/CAox9mKq #hundar #hundse
Word Generalization by a Dog (Canis familiaris): Is Shape Important? - http://t.co/1dz82LTN
Word Generalization by a Dog (Canis familiaris): Is Shape Important? http://t.co/Jo3h6h54
Study into how dogs associate words with shapes while learning about object recognition - http://t.co/wi7yf1jl
Study into how dogs associate words with shapes while learning about object recognition - http://t.co/wi7yf1jl
Study into how dogs associate words with shapes while learning about object recognition - http://t.co/wi7yf1jl
dogs and humans use different information to learn names for objects, dogs associate words with objects based on size http://t.co/ycGgXLXu
Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do http://t.co/aludnCUY #ethology
↓論文の方を翻訳してみたら、あのチェイサーのことにも触れてる。同じ研究グループが扱ってるのかな。 http://t.co/o6ZZAGjI
#PLOSONE: Word Generalization by a Dog: Is Shape Important? http://t.co/MeGTmCIt
Neues aus der Hundesprache: Objekte werden nach Größe erkannt, nicht nach Form http://t.co/InruL3cV
Interesting article on difference in mechanism for learning new words: dogs go by size and texture, we go by... http://t.co/SQagcE0E
Woof! Size matters more than shape in doggy speak! #animals #science http://t.co/R4n5WQZS
ヒトは物の名前を別の物に般化させるのに物体の形が同じことが重要。しかし、犬は短期的には物体の大きさ、長期的には触感に基づいて般化させる。 Word Generalization by a Dog : Is Shape Important? http://t.co/SX0xtcFn
#PLOSONE: dogs learn to associate words with objects but use different cues from humans to sort them into categories http://t.co/LWhtfYm8
Multi-sensory associations: When your dog learns a word for a new object, what features are important? http://t.co/EvTH80ts
Multi-sensory associations: When your dog learns a word for a new object, what features are important? http://t.co/EvTH80ts
Word Generalization by a Dog (Canis familiaris): Is Shape Important? van der Zee E, Zulch H, Mills D. Word... http://t.co/IM7PoMtw
Interesting research by lincoln showing dogs use size and texture rather than shape to distinguish objects http://t.co/HL4FFAYz
Human word comprehension in dogs http://t.co/d9yfe3va
Is vorm belangrijk voor honden? http://t.co/46eT2DUp
Why is still surprising that animals show generalization? MT @Matt_Craddock Word Generalization by a Dog http://t.co/jss2dkkI
#PLOSONE Word Generalization by a Dog: Is Shape Important? http://t.co/vDeqojJ5 Insert obvious Lassie joke here. Timmy, well, etc.
Here is full study on how dogs as opposed to small children learn language. http://t.co/ikaPWtrX
Research - Word generalisation by dogs, is shape important? http://t.co/YFw4awyQ
RT @PLOSONE: Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do http://t.co/weRD7Z9D
RT @PLOSONE: Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do, from @emilevanderzee http://t.co/INwCJpGb
Word Generalization by a Dog (Canis familiaris): Is Shape Important? http://t.co/whqh8KMX
Word Generalization by a Dog (<italic>Canis familiaris</italic>): Is Shape Important? http://t.co/whqh8KMX
Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do, from @emilevanderzee http://t.co/INwCJpGb
Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do, from @emilevanderzee http://t.co/INwCJpGb
Call that a ball? Dogs learn to associate words with objects differently than humans do, from @emilevanderzee http://t.co/INwCJpGb