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Rehoming of laboratory animals : analyzing animal welfare pitfalls and presenting possibilities Ghent University
Guidance on the risk assessment of food and feed from genetically modified animals and on animal health and welfare aspects Research Institute for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
Prius Invisa Animalia : attitudes towards animals in Late Medieval travel accounts Ghent University
This article is based on a close reading of four fifteenth-century travel accounts, written by travellers who started their journey in the Burgundian Low Countries and visited Jerusalem. We analyse what the representations of animals in the travelogues of Guillebert de Lannoy, Bertrandon de la Broquière, Anselm Adornes, and Joos van Ghistele tell us about medieval travellers, their experiences, cultural backgrounds, curiosity, and self-images. ...
A systematic review of the use of technology to monitor animal welfare in zoo animals: is there space for improvement? Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp
The Ventral Visual Pathway Represents Animal Appearance over Animacy, Unlike Human Behavior and Deep Neural Networks KU Leuven
Recent studies showed agreement between how the human brain and neural networks represent objects, suggesting that we might start to understand the underlying computations. However, we know that the human brain is prone to biases at many perceptual and cognitive levels, often shaped by learning history and evolutionary constraints. Here, we explore one such perceptual phenomenon, perceiving animacy, and use the performance of neural networks as ...
Éléments de la vie quotidienne . The animal and human remains (Les vestiges animaux et humains) Flanders Heritage
Erratum to “Bonobos and chimpanzees preferentially attend to familiar members of the dominant sex” [Animal Behaviour 177 (2021) 193–206] (Animal Behaviour (2021) 177 (193–206), (S000334722100138X), (10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.04.027)) Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp
It was discovered that the original online version of the above article contained errors that were not the fault of the authors. The affiliations of two authors, Fumihiro Kano and Christopher Krupenye, were listed incorrectly on the title page of the article. The Publisher decided to ‘resupply’ (repost and replace) the XML and online PDF of the article. The printed issue has also been correspondingly altered. Elsevier regrets and apologizes for ...