Sub-Department of Animal Behaviour


 

Publications for Dr Nathan Emery

Perrett, DI & Emery, NJ (1994). Understanding the intentions of others from visual social signals: neurophysiological evidence. Current Psychology of Cognition, 13, 683-694.

Emery, NJ & Perrett, DI (1995). Multidimensional scaling analysis of anatomical connections: evidence for a processing stream connecting the amygdala, anterior temporal and orbitofrontal cortex. European Journal of Neuroscience, S8:102.

Perrett, DI, Oram, MO, Wachsmuth, E & Emery, NJ (1995). Understanding the behaviour and 'minds' of others from their facial and body signals: studies of visual processing within the temporal cortex. In: Nakajima, T & Ono, T (Eds.) Emotion, Memory and Behavior: Studies on human and non-human primates. (pp. 155-167), Taniguchi Symposium on Brain Sciences 18. Japan Scientific Societies Press: Tokyo, Japan.

Perrett, DI, Oram, MW, Lorincz, EN, Emery, NJ & Baker, CI (1996). Monitoring social signals arising from the face: studies of brain cells and behaviour. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 25: 62.

Emery, NJ, Lorincz, EN, Perrett, DI, Oram, MW & Baker, CI (1997). Gaze following and joint attention in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Journal of Comparative Psychology, 111, 286-293.

Emery, NJ, Machado, CJ, Mendoza, SP, Capitanio, JP, Mason, WA & Amaral, DG (1998). The role of the amygdala in dyadic social interaction and the stress response in monkeys. Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, 24: 780.

Emery, NJ (2000). The eyes have it: the neuroethology, evolution and function of social gaze. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 24, 581-604.

Emery, NJ & Amaral, DG (2000). The role of the amygdala in primate social cognition. In: Lane, RD & Nadel, L (Eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion. (pp. 156-191), Oxford University Press: New York.

Emery, NJ & Perrett, DI (2000). How can studies of the monkey brain help us understand "theory of mind" and autism in humans? In: Baron-Cohen, S, Tager-Flusberg, H & Cohen, D (Eds.), Understanding Other Minds: Perspectives from developmental cognitive neuroscience (Second edition). (pp. 279-310), Oxford University Press: Oxford.

Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS (2000). Review of "Sensory Exotica: A world beyond sensory experience" by Howard C Hughes. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4, 208.

Emery, NJ, Capitanio, JP, Mendoza, SP, Mason, WA, Machado, CJ & Amaral, DG (2001) The effects of bilateral lesions of the amygdala on dyadic social interactions in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Behavioral Neuroscience, 15, 515-544.

Clayton, NS, Griffiths, DP, Emery, N.J. & Dickinson, A (2001) Elements of episodic-like memory in animals. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: Biological Sciences, 356, 1483-1491. Reprinted in Baddeley, A, Conway, M & Aggleton, JP (2002, Eds.), Episodic memory: New directions in research. (pp. 232-248), Oxford University Press: Oxford.

Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS (2001). Effects of experience and social context on prospective caching strategies in scrub jays. Nature, 414, 443-446. See also Nature, 414, ix, and Correction in Nature, 416, 349 (2002).

Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS (2001). Review of "Behavioral Neurobiology" by Thomas Carew. Ethology, 107, 862-864.

Emery, NJ (2002). Review of "The Amygdala: A functional analysis" edited by John Aggleton. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section B: Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 55B, 91-93.

Emery, NJ (2002). Review of "Human Evolutionary Psychology" by Louise Barrett, Robin Dunbar & John Lycett. Animal Behaviour, 64, 673-674.

de Kort, SR, Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS (2003). Food offering in jackdaws Corvus monedula. Naturwissenschaften, 90, 238-240.

Clayton, NS, Bussey, TJ, Emery, NJ & Dickinson, A (2003). Prometheus to Proust: the case for behavioural criteria for 'mental time travel'. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7, 436-437.

Emery, NJ, Dally, J & Clayton, NS (2003). Western scrub-jays (Aphelocoma californica) use cognitive strategies to protect their caches from thieving conspecifics. Animal Cognition, in press.

Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS. (2003). Comparing the complex cognitive abilities of birds and primates In: Rogers, L. J. & Kaplan, G (Eds.) Comparative Vertebrate Cognition: Are primates superior to non-primates? Kluwer Academic Publishing. In press.

Emery, NJ (2003). A user's guide to life. Review of "Liars, Lovers, Heroes" by Steven Quartz & Terrence Sejnowski. Science, 300, 585-586.

Ruys, JD, Mendoza, SP, Capitanio, JP, Emery, NJ, Mason, WA & Amaral, DG Adrenal responses to psychological stressors in rhesus macaques with bilateral lesions of the amygdala. Physiology & Behavior, in press.

Easton, A & Emery, NJ. (editors, 2004) Cognitive Neuroscience of Social Behaviour. Psychology Press. In press.

Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS. (2004). Animal cognition. In: Bolhuis, J & Giraldeau, L-A (Eds.), The Behavior of Animals: Mechanisms, function & evolution. Blackwell Science Ltd.: Oxford. In press.

Clayton, NS, Emery, NJ & Dickinson, A. (2004). The rationality of animal memory: The cognition of caching. In: Nudds, M & Hurley, S (Eds.) Rational Animals? Oxford University Press: Oxford. In press.

Emery, NJ (2004). Are corvids 'feathered apes'? Cognitive evolution in crows, jays, rooks and jackdaws. In: Watanabe, S (Ed.) Comparative Analysis of Minds. Keio University Press: Tokyo. In press.

Emery, NJ. (2004). The evolution of social cognition. In: Easton, A & Emery, NJ. (Eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Social Behaviour. Psychology Press. In press.

Easton, A & Emery, NJ (2004). What is cognitive social neuroscience? In: Easton, A & Emery, NJ (Eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Social Behaviour. Psychology Press. In press.

de Kort, SR, Tebbich, S, Dally, JM, Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS. (2004). The comparative cognition of caching. In: Wasserman, EA & Zentall, TR (Eds.), Comparative Cognition: Experimental explanations of animal intelligence. Oxford University Press: Oxford. In press.

Clayton, NS & Emery, NJ. (2004). Cache robbing. In: Bekoff, M (Ed.), Encyclopaedia of Animal Behavior, Greenwood Publishing. In press.

Emery, NJ (2004). Review of "Intelligence of Apes and Other Rational Beings" by Duane Rumbaugh & David Washburn. American Scientist, in press.

Dally, JM, Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS. Cache protection strategies by western scrub-jays: Implications for social cognition. Re-submission, Proc Roy Soc Lond: B.

Dally, JM, Emery, NJ & Clayton, NS. Cache protection strategies by western scrub-jays (Aphelocoma californica): hiding food in the shade. Submitted.

Dally, JM, Clayton, NS & Emery, NJ. Mirror-use in the western scrub-jay: an alternative to the 'mark test'? Submitted.


 
Nathan Emery

Research Groups
- Behavioural neuroscience
- Neural mechanisms of learning and memory
- Corvid and primate cognition
- Behavioural inhibition in young children
- Alternative modes of development: plasticity and epigenesis
- Comparative Cognition

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maintained by Chris Bird