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List of contributors | p. xi |
Acknowledgments | p. xviii |
Linking spatial cognition and spatial perception | p. 1 |
Postscript, Some terms and concepts used in the discussion of spatial cognition and perception | p. 19 |
What do animals know and how do they represent external space? | p. 33 |
Psychology and the philosophy of spatial perception: a history, or how the idea of spatial cognition in animals developed | p. 35 |
Common principles shared by spatial and other kinds of cognition | p. 54 |
To be buried in thought, lost in space, or lost in action: is that the question? | p. 75 |
Perception and memory of landmarks: implications for spatial behavior and cognition | p. 97 |
The encoding of geometry in various vertebrate species | p. 99 |
The visually guided routes of ants | p. 117 |
The role of landmarks in small-and large-scale navigation | p. 152 |
Examining spatial cognitive strategies in small-scale and large-scale space in tamarin monkeys | p. 180 |
Spatial learning and foraging in macaques | p. 197 |
Evolutionary perspectives on cognitive capacities in spatial perception and object recognition | p. 211 |
The evolution of human spatial cognition | p. 213 |
Egocentric and allocentric spatial learning in the nonhuman primate | p. 237 |
Does echolocation make understanding object permanence unnecessary? Failure to find object permanence understanding in dolphins and beluga whales | p. 258 |
Multimodal sensory integration and concurrent navigation strategies for spatial cognition in real and artificial organisms | p. 281 |
Does mapping of the body generate understanding of external space? | p. 321 |
Movement: the generative source of spatial perception and spatial cognition | p. 323 |
Understanding the body: spatial perception and spatial cognition | p. 341 |
The evolution of parietal areas involved in hand use in primates | p. 365 |
Body mapping and spatial transformations | p. 422 |
"Understanding" of external space generated by bodily re-mapping: an insight from the neurophysiology of tool-using monkeys | p. 439 |
Left-right spatial discrimination and the evolution of hemispheric specialization: some new thoughts on some old ideas | p. 456 |
Comparisons of human and nonhuman primate spatial cognitive abilities | p. 475 |
The geographical imagination | p. 477 |
Of chimps and children: use of spatial symbols by two species | p. 486 |
Chimpanzee spatial skills: a model for human performance on scale model tasks? | p. 502 |
The development of place learning in comparative perspective | p. 520 |
Spatial cognition and memory in symbol-using chimpanzees | p. 539 |
Index | p. 565 |
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