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Michael Mendl

Researcher at University of Bristol

Publications -  236
Citations -  12365

Michael Mendl is an academic researcher from University of Bristol. The author has contributed to research in topics: Animal Welfare (journal) & Affect (psychology). The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 222 publications receiving 10856 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Mendl include University of Cambridge & University of Groningen.

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Journal Article

Can sleep behaviour be used as an indicator of stress in group-housed rats (Rattus norvegicus)?

TL;DR: Low frequencies of sleep behaviour and low sleep duration correlate with some indicators of elevated physiological and physical stress, raising the possibility that sleep behaviour may provide an under-utilised, but potentially important, non-invasive indicator of stress and welfare for animals in groups.
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Short-term social memory in the laboratory rat: its susceptibility to disturbance.

TL;DR: The results suggest that routine husbandry procedures can disrupt short-term social memory, which may lead to an increase in aggression due to a failure of recognition, which has implications for the welfare of captive social animals.
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Housing conditions affect rat responses to two types of ambiguity in a reward–reward discrimination cognitive bias task

TL;DR: Control rats showed more anxiety-like behaviour in open-field and elevated plus maze tests than UHT rats and a new ambiguity test was developed that may probe biases in attentional processes.
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The effects of litter-size variation on the development of play behaviour in the domestic cat: litters of one and two

TL;DR: As the kittens grew older, single-kitten mothers showed higher levels of aggression towards their young than did mothers of litters of two, and single kittens experienced quantitatively less social play than did kittens with siblings.
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Can male Eurasian jays disengage from their own current desire to feed the female what she wants

TL;DR: Male Eurasian jays' decisions about their mates' desires are partially biased by their own desire and might be based upon similar processes as those found in humans.