Projects per year
Abstract
Many organisms coordinate their group behavior in time. On a short timescale, group vocalizations, movements or visual displays can exhibit temporal interdependence. Synchronous behavior has received significantly more attention than all other forms of animal coordination. Antisynchrony (i.e., perfect alternation) is produced in nature, but only recently perceptual biases toward antisynchrony were independently found in human infants and fiddler crabs. Here, these unrelated experiments are linked and inserted into a broader quantitative framework. Future comparative research should encompass perception of other forms of coordination across species and explanatory levels, toward an integrative neuro-evolutionary framework of temporal coordination.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 13-24 |
Journal | Cognition |
Volume | 143 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Event | 10th International Conference on the Evolution of Language, EVOLANG X - Vienna, Austria Duration: 14 Apr 2014 → 17 Apr 2014 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'More than one way to see it: Individual heuristics in avian visual computation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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EU398: ABACUS: Advancing Behavioral and Cognitive Understanding of Speech
Van Der Ham, A., Little, H. R., Eryilmaz, K., Filippi, P., Rasilo, H., Ravignani, A., De Boer, B. & Thompson, W.
1/02/12 → 31/01/17
Project: Fundamental