Литмир - Электронная Библиотека
A
A

Pruetz J.D. Evidence of cave use by savanna chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Fongoli, Senegal: implications for thermoregulatory behavior // Primates. — 2007. — Vol. 48. — № 4. — P. 316–319.

Pruetz J.D., Bertolani P. Savanna chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes verus, hunt with tools // Current Biology. — 2007. — Vol. 17. — Issue 5. — P. 412–417.

Quine W. V. O. Word and object. — Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1960. — 294 p.

Rauschecker J.P., Korte M. Auditory compensation for early blindness in cat cerebral cortex // Journal of Neuroscience. — 1993. — Vol. 13. — P. 4538–4548.

Read D.W. Working Memory: A ognitive limit to non-human primate recursive thinking prior to hominid evolution // Evolutionary Psychology. — 2008. — V. 6. — P. 676–714.

Reeve H.K., Hölldobler B. The emergence of a superorganism through intergroup competition // Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA. — 2007. — Vol. 104. — No. 23. — P. 9736–9740.

Remez R.E., Pardo J.S., Piorkowski R.L., Rubin P.E. On the bistability of sine wave analogues of speech // Psychological Science. — 2001. — Vol. 12. — No. 1. — P. 24–29.

Rendall D., Rodman P.S., Emond R.E. Vocal recognition of individuals and kin in free ranging rhesus monkeys // Animal behaviour. — 1996. — Vol. 51. — Issue 5. — P. 1007–1015.

Rendall D., Seyfarth R.M., Cheney D.L., Owren M.J. The meaning and function of grunt variants in baboons // Animal Behaviour. — 1999. — Vol. 57. — Issue 3. — P. 583–592.

Rizzolatti G., Arbib M.A. Language within our grasp // Trends in neurosciences. — 1998. — Vol. 21. — Issue 5. — P. 188–194.

Roberts M., Onnis L., Chater N. Acquisition and evolution of quasi-regular languages: Tw o puzzles for the price of one // Language origins: Perspectives on evolution / Ed. by Tallerman M. — Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 2005. — P. 334–356.

Robinson G.E., Fernald R.D., Clayton D.F. Genes and Social Behavior // Science. — 2008. — Vol. 322. — No. 5903. — P. 896–900.

Rockman M.V., Hahn M.W., Soranzo N., Zimprich F., Goldstein D.B., Wray G.A. Ancient and recent positive selection transformed opioid cis-regulation in humans // Public library of science: Biology. — 2005. — Vol. 3. — e387.

Rosch E.H. Principles of categorization // Cognition and categorization / Ed. by Rosch E., Lloyd B.B. — Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1978. — P. 27–48.

Rossi A.P., Ades C. A dog at the keyboard: using arbitrary signs to communicate requests // Animal cognition. — 2008. — Vol. 11. — No. 2. — P. 329–338.

Ruhlen M. On the origin of languages: Studies in linguistic taxonomy. — Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press, 1994. — 356 p.

Saffran J.R., Aslin R.N., Newport E.L. Statistical learning by 8-month-old infants // Science. — 1996. — Vol. 274. — No. 5294. — P. 1926–1928.

Sandler W., Meir I., Padden C., Aronoff M. The emergence of grammar: Systematic structure in a new language // Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. — 2005. — Vol. 102. — No. 7. — P. 2661–2665.

Sanvito S., Galimberti F., Miller E.H. Observational evidences of vocal learning in southern elephant seals: a longitudinal study // Ethology. — 2007. — Vol. 113. — Issue 2. — P. 137–146.

Savage-Rumbaugh E.S., Lewin R. Kanzi: The ape at the brink of the human mind. — N.Y.: John Wiley and sons, 1994/2003. — 299 p.

Savage-Rumbaugh E.S., Murphy J., Sevcik R.A., Brakke K.E., Williams, Rumbaugh D.M. Language comprehension in ape and child / Monographs of the society for research in child development. Serial No. 233. — Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1993. — Vol. 58. — No. 3–4. — 256 p.

Schusterman R.J., Gisiner R. Artificial language comprehension in dolphins and sea lions: The essential cognitive skills // The Psychological Record. — 1988. — Vol. 38. — P. 311–348.

Schusterman R.J., Krieger K. California sea lions are capable of semantic comprehension // The Psychological Record. — 1984. — Vol. 34. — P. 3–23.

Semaw S., Rogers M.J., Quade J., Renne P.R., Butler R.F., Domínguez-Rodrigo M., Stout D., Hart W.S., Pickering T., Simpson S.W. 2.6-Million-year-old stone tools and associated bones from OGS-6 and OGS-7, Gona, Afar, Ethiopia // Journal of Human Evolution. — 2003. — Vol. 45. — P. 169–177.

Semaw S., Simpson S.W., Quade J., Renne P.R., Butler R.F. McIntosh W.C., Levin N., Dominguez-Rodrigo M., Rogers M.J. Early Pliocene hominids from Gona, Ethiopia // Nature. — 2005. — Vol. 433. — P. 301–305.

Senghas A., Kita S., Özyürek A. Children creating core properties of language: Evidence from an emerging sign language in Nicaragua // Science. — 2004. — Vol. 305. — No. 5691. — P. 1779–1782.

Senut B., Pickford M., Gommery D., Mein P., Cheboi K., Coppens Y. First hominid from the Miocene (Lukeino formation, Kenya) // Comptes rendus de l’Académie des sciences de Paris. Ser. Sciences de la Terre et des planèts. — 2001. — Vol. 332. — P. 137–144.

Sherry D.F., Galef B.G. (Jr). Cultural transmission without imitation: Milk bottle opening by birds // Animal behaviour. — 1984. — Vol. 32. — P. 937–938.

Sherry D.F., Galef B.G. (Jr). Social learning without imitation: More about milk bottle opening by birds // Animal behaviour. — 1990. — Vol. 40. — P. 987–989.

Shinkareva S.V., Mason R.A., Malave V.L., Wang W., Mitchell T.M., Just M.A. Using FMRI brain activation to identify cognitive states associated with perception of tools and dwellings // Public Library of Science ONE. — 2008. — Vol. 3. — Issue 1. — e1394.

Singleton J.L., Newport E.L. When learners surpass their models: The acquisition of American Sign Language from inconsistent input // Cognitive psychology. — 2004. — Vol. 49. — P. 370–407.

Sinnott J.M. Comparative phoneme boundaries // Current Topics in Acoustical Research. — 1998. — Vol. 2. — P. 135–138.

Sinnott J.M., Brown C.H. Perception of the American English liquid /ra-la/ contrast by humans and monkeys // Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. — 1997. — Vol. 102. — No. 1. — P. 588–602.

Sinnott J.M., Saporita T.A. Differences in American English, Spanish, and monkey perception of the say-stay trading relation // Perception and Psychophysics. — 2000. — Vol. 62. — Issue 6. — P. 1312–1319.

Sinnott J.M., Street S.L., Mosteller K.W., Williamson T.L. Behavioral measures of vowel sensitivity in Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus): effects of age and genetic origin // Hearing Research. — 1997. — Vol. 112. — No. 1. — P. 235–246.

Sinnott J.M., Williamson T.L. Can macaques perceive place of articulation from formant transition information? // Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. — 1999. — Vol. 106. — Issue 2. — P. 929–937.

Skipper J.I., Goldin-Meadow S., Nusbaum H.C., Small S.L. Speech-associated gestures, Broca’s area, and the human mirror system // Brain and language. — 2007. — Vol. 101. — Issue 3. — P. 260–277.

Slobodchikoff C.N., Kiriazis J., Fischer C., Creef E. Semantic information distinguishing individual predators in the alarm calls of Gunnison’s prairie dogs // Animal Behaviour. — 1991. — Vol. 42. — Issue 5. — P. 713–719.

Slocombe K.E., Zuberbühler K. Functionally referential communication in a chimpanzee // Current Biology. — 2005. — Vol. 15. — Issue 19. — P. 1779–1784.

Smith F.H. Upper Pleistocene hominid evolution in South-Central Europe: A review of evidence and analysis of trends // Current Anthropology. — 1982. — Vol. 83. — P. 667–703.

Sommers M.S., Moody D.B.; Prosen C.A.; Stebbins W.C. Formant frequenc y discrimination by Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) // The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. — 1992. — Vol. 91. — Issue 6. — P. 3499–3510.

95
{"b":"877629","o":1}