Audrey Maille
University of Rennes
14 Papers
72 Citations
Audrey Maille is an academic researcher from University of Rennes. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gesture & Task (project management). The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Audrey Maille include University of the Witwatersrand & University of Strasbourg.
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Papers
Olive baboons, Papio anubis, adjust their visual and auditory intentional gestures to the visual attention of others
Marie Bourjade,Marie Bourjade,Adrien Meguerditchian,Adrien Meguerditchian,Audrey Maille,Florence Gaunet,Jacques Vauclair +6 more
TL;DR: Evidence that olive baboons understand the state of the eyes in others' visual attention and use requesting gestures intentionally is offered, and it is emphasized that Old World monkeys shift to acoustic communication when the recipient is not visually attending.
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Ecophysiology of cognition: How do environmentally induced changes in physiology affect cognitive performance?
Audrey Maille,Carsten Schradin +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied seasonal changes in cognitive performance depending on energy availability in populations facing different predation risks, and the associated changes in the mechanisms of allostasis (for example, hormone levels).
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Inferences about the location of food in lemurs (Eulemur macaco and Eulemur fulvus): a comparison with apes and monkeys
TL;DR: The ability of black and brown lemurs to make inferences about hidden food was tested using the same paradigm as in Call’s cup task experiment and it is revealed thatLemurs are capable of inferential reasoning by exclusion and lemur make better use of auditory than visual information.
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Which are the features of the TUBE task that make it so efficient in detecting manual asymmetries? An investigation in two Cercopithecine species (Cercopithecus neglectus and Cercocebus torquatus).
TL;DR: It is proposed that the TUBE-bimanual task is highly efficient in detecting hemispheric specialization because bimanual role differentiation would make precise digit use highly skillful.
18
Manual laterality for pointing gestures compared to grasping actions in guenons and mangabeys
TL;DR: It is proposed that in Old World monkeys, as in humans and apes, the production of intentional and referential gestures may rely on the activation of specific regions of the left hemisphere specialized in the processing of communicative signals.
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