Showing posts with label heliothine moth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heliothine moth. Show all posts

Friday, 18 May 2012

Publication list is growing and growing and growing

After two slow years, 2010 and 2011, 2012 takes off, already 7 papers that are now published and three more that are accepted, and still 4 more that are submitted.
Here my updated publication list with DOI where available. Pdf's can be send to you (leave a comment with your email address).

(1) Pfuhl G, Tjelmeland H, Molden S, Biegler R (2009): Cache retrieval: precision of knowledge and pilfering probability determine when to stop searching. Animal Behaviour 78(4), 819-828 doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2009.06.014

(2) Pfuhl G, Tjelmeland, H, Biegler R. (2011): Precision and reliability in navigation.  Bulletin of Mathematical Biology 73(5), 951-977 DOI: 10.1007/s11538-010-9547-y

(3) Pfuhl G, Biegler R (2011): Do humans know the imprecision inherent in a map? Meta-carto semiotics
 
(4) Pfuhl G (2012). Two strings to pull from – do ravens choose the easier one? Animal Cognition. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-012-0483-0


(5) Whitlock J, Pfuhl G, Dagslott N, Moser MB, Moser E (2012): Functional Split Between Parietal and Entorhinal Cortices in the Rat. Neuron. 73(4): 789-802

(6) Pfuhl G, Biegler R (2012). Ordinality and planning in jackdaws. Animal Cognition. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-012-0509-7

(7) Zhao X-C, Pfuhl G, Surlykke AM, Tro J, Berg B (2012): A mechano and sound sensitive centrifugal neuron type in the central olfactory pathway of the heliothine moth. Journal of Comparative Neurology, In press    
      
(8) Pfuhl G, Barrera LBG, Living M, Biegler R (2012). Do adjustments in search behaviour depend on the precision of spatial memory? accepted
That paper shows some modularity in spatial decision making in humans.Our follow-up on learning of precision (Biegler, Ebad Farzadeh, Pfuhl) is analysed but not completely written up. Have to wait for the next break in teaching and grading exams.

(9) Pfuhl G, Biegler R (2012). Do jackdaws have a memory for order? accepted
That looks at episodic memory in a non-verbal manner, would be interesting to use the paradigm in children and in other nonhuman animals

(10) Pfuhl G, Ebad Farzadeh H, Biegler R (2012). Assessment of altruism depends on inferred ulterior motives. accepted
that paper extends the study of mechanism in decision making into the social realm. Our follow-up on people along the autistic spectrum is in preparation. We wait until Leif Ekblad got his paper of the new scale for measuring autism accepted - after all we use the same scale in addition to our social scenarios.

The four submitted papers and 3 drafts are hopefully soon moving ahead, so that the publication record is increasing further.