Log In
Or create an account ->
Imperial Library
Home
About
News
Upload
Forum
Help
Login/SignUp
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
Mindreading in Animals: Its Importance and History
1.1. Why the Question of Animal Mindreading Matters
1.2. A Brief History of the Animal Mindreading Debate
1.3. Conclusion
2 The Logical Problem in Animal Mindreading Research
2.2. The Logical Problem
2.3. Current Protocols to Test for Cognitive State Attribution in Animals
2.5. A Complementary Behavior-Reading Hypothesis: Direct Line of Gaze
2.6. Are Complementary Behavior-Reading Hypotheses Necessarily Ad Hoc?
2.7. The Issue of Simplicity
2.8. Knowledge/Ignorance Attribution in Primates
2.9. Those Amazing Scrub Jays
2.10. Remarks on Goal-Directed/Intentional-Action Attribution in Animals
2.11. Conclusion
3 Solving the Logical Problem for Perceptual State Attribution
3.2. A General Framework for Solving the Logical Problem
3.3. The Appearance-Reality Mindreading (ARM) Theory
3.4. How Animals Might Attribute States of Perceptual Appearing
3.5. Experimental Protocols That Can Solve the Logical Problem
3.7. Visual Perspective Taking with Chimpanzees using Size-Distorting Barriers
3.8. Visual Perspective Taking with Ravens using Deceptive Amodal Completion Stimuli
3.9. Visual Perspective Taking with Chimpanzees using Deceptive Amodal Completion Stimuli
3.10. Visual Perspective Taking with Dogs using Deceptive Amodal Completion Stimuli
3.11. Conclusion
4 Solving the Logical Problem for Belief Attribution
4.2. Berm6dez's Argument against Belief Attribution in Animals
4.3. The Empirical Studies
4.4. From Perceptual Appearing Attribution to Belief Attribution
4.5. A Simple Appearance-Reality Screening Test
4.6. Revisability Belief-Attribution Protocol No. 1
4.7. Revisability Belief-Attribution Protocol No. 2
4.8. Representation of Abstract Relations by Primates
4.9. Abstract Belief-Attribution Protocol
4.10. Conclusion
5 Epilogue
Notes
References
Index
← Prev
Back
Next →
← Prev
Back
Next →