
Fay Clark
@drfayclark
University of Bristol | Senior Lecturer & PI: Comparative Challenge Lab | Co-Founder: ManyZoos | Game Psychology & Flow in animals | Primates | Cetaceans | 🧠🧩
ID: 3398697725
http://fayclark.weebly.com 01-08-2015 13:15:56
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My awesome department UCSD CogSci Dept is hiring THREE!!! Assistant Professors in any area of Cognitive Science. See job ad for details: apol-recruit.ucsd.edu/JPF04016. I love my colleagues and the students are unbelievably talented and interdisciplinary minded. Join us!

Delighted to share Comparative Cognition Lab @ UC San Diego first empirical study on button trained dogs. We show that dogs can recognize and respond appropriately to the words produced via buttons and they respond similarly independently of who is producing the word. 1/n dx.plos.org/10.1371/journa…


Applications are open for Max Planck Research Group Leaders! this is an amazing opportunity to build an independent research group that comes with 2.7 MEuro support over 6 years. If you're interested in being hosted Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, please contact me! mpg.de/career/max-pla…

📢Come join us University of Bristol Biological Sciences!📢 Excellent initiative at University of Bristol: Internally funded fellowships for #ECRs of black / black mixed heritage Search: "Bristol Futures Research Development Fellowship" Deadline 28 Oct 2024. #BlackinSTEM Please repost!


Looking forward to seeing the Shark Bay dolphins Shark Bay Dolphin Research in this new series! 🐬🐬🐬


We are excited to invite you to a unique scientific conference, celebrating the 100-year anniversary of The Company of Biologists. The conference will incorporate the JEB Symposium Sensory Perception in a Changing World #biologists100 Don't miss the opportunity! bit.ly/4dyDiIf



Next week, WAI Outreach Manager Janire Castellano, PhD will be co-chairing a workshop on animal welfare at Animal Behaviour Live. If you'd like to hear from Fay Clark, Dennis Bahati, and Dr Heather Browning (Veit), register for the (free!) conference here: animalbehaviour.live/conference #ABL2024





Palaeognathae is a small group of birds which includes several species that have evolved flightlessness and gigantism, such as emus, ostriches, and the now-extinct giant moa. Little is known about their cognitive abilities. Nature Portfolio Scientific Reports
