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Behavioral Ecology
By tracking brain activity as primates move freely in the wild, neuroethology could reshape what we think we know about our own minds.
A fresh view of intelligence — spanning living systems from bacteria to human civilization — challenges the idea that it’s merely problem-solving.
Researchers are finding signs of multiple phases of sleep all over the animal kingdom. The ‘active’ sleep phases look very much like REM.
Origin of life studies have always focused on a set of strict environments that could give rise to life. Ante-life opens new possibilities.
Parity tasks (such as odd and even categorisation) are considered abstract and high-level numerical concepts in humans.
Toxoplasmosis, which results from a chance encounter with a cougar and the parasite it carries, can push a wolf to seek alpha status.
Based on product labeling claims, scientists hypothesized that green cleaners were less toxic. They were wrong.
Turning off a gene called “Myc” has a surprising effect in male fruit flies: They start courting other males.
Scuba divers often appear to be swimming through a calm and muffled universe. This couldn't be farther from the truth.
There’s an enormous evolutionary advantage for flamingos to stand on one leg, but genetics doesn't help. Only physics explains why.
We already know animals feel emotions, and that they can understand humans' emotions. But can they understand each other's emotions?
Fish are surprisingly good in numbers tests — a skill that sometimes makes the difference between life and death.