총 379건 중 379건 출력
, 2/38 페이지
-
11
-
Adults and Children Blatantly Dehumanize Outgroups
-
Zhou Wen;
Hare Brian;
;
(,
v.,
2020,
)
-
12
-
Chimpanzee Predation and the Ecology of Microbial Exchange
-
Wrangham Richard;
Wilson Michael;
Hare Brian;
Wolfe Nathan D.;
Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins University, 624 North Broadway Rm. 210, Baltimore, 21202 USA;
Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins University, 624 North Broadway Rm. 210, Baltimore, 21202 USA;
Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins University, 624 North Broadway Rm. 210, Baltimore, 21202 USA;
Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins University, 624 North Broadway Rm. 210, Baltimore, 21202 USA;
(Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease,
v.,
2000,
)
-
13
-
States of nature: Geographical aspects of current theories of human evolution
-
Protevi, John;
;
(Political geography,
v.70,
2019,
pp.127-136)
-
14
-
Survival of the Friendliest: Homo sapiens Evolved via Selection for Prosociality
-
Hare, Brian;
;
(Annual review of psychology,
v.68,
2017,
pp.155-186)
-
15
-
Domestication experiments reveal developmental link between friendliness and cognition
-
Hare, Brian;
;
(Journal of bioeconomics,
v.20,
2018,
pp.159-163)
-
16
-
Can competitive paradigms increase the validity of experiments on primate social cognition?
-
Hare, Brian;
;
(Animal cognition,
v.4,
2001,
pp.269-280)
-
17
-
Patience reveals chimpanzee cognitive development
-
Hare, Brian;
The author is at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Psychology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, D-04103, Germany, and at Duke University, Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy, Durham, North Carolina, 27705, USA. hare@eva.mpg.de;
(Nature neuroscience,
v.10,
2007,
pp.1077-1077)
-
18
-
From Nonhuman to Human Mind: What Changed and Why?
-
Hare, Brian;
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany;
(Current directions in psychological science : a journal of the American Psychological Society,
v.16,
2007,
pp.60-64)
-
19
-
Survival of the Friendliest:<i>Homo sapiens</i>Evolved via Selection for Prosociality
-
Hare, Brian;
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology and Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708;
(Annual review of psychology,
v.68,
2017,
pp.155-186)
-
20
-
From Hominoid to Hominid Mind: What Changed and Why?
-
Hare, Brian;
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology and Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27514;
(Annual review of anthropology,
v.40,
2011,
pp.293-309)