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Animal intelligence: Experimental studies

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About This Book

A series of controlled experiments and theoretical essays present systematic investigations into animal behavior and learning. Detailed apparatus and procedures are described, followed by experimental results with cats, dogs, chicks and monkeys that probe trial-and-error learning, imitation, inference, association, attention, instinct and inhibition. The work analyzes complexity, permanence and delicacy of associations, social responsiveness and the effects of tuition, then generalizes findings into laws and hypotheses of behavior and considers implications for pedagogy, anthropology and the evolution of human intellect. Emphasis is on observable responses and the formation of connections between situation and action.

About the Author

Thorndike, Edward L. portrait

Edward L. Thorndike

Edward L. Thorndike was an influential American psychologist known for his pioneering work in educational psychology and the study of animal behavior. He is best recognized for his experiments on animal intelligence, which laid the groundwork for behaviorism and the scientific study of learning processes. His notable works include "Animal Intelligence: Experimental Studies," where he explored the cognitive abilities of various species, and "The Psychology of Arithmetic," which examined the mental processes involved in mathematical reasoning. Thorndike's contributions have significantly shaped modern educational practices and psychological theories.

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