S
Sophie Lumineau
Researcher at University of Rennes
Publications - 79
Citations - 1316
Sophie Lumineau is an academic researcher from University of Rennes. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quail & Offspring. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 74 publications receiving 1170 citations. Previous affiliations of Sophie Lumineau include University of Vienna & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Stable Individual Profiles of Daily Timing of Migratory Restlessness in European Quail
Aline Bertin,Cécilia Houdelier,Marie-Annick Richard-Yris,Catherine Guyomarc'h,Sophie Lumineau +4 more
TL;DR: Stable individual profiles in the daily time course of migratory restlessness in partial‐migrant European quail are shown, suggesting that their drive to migrate could be synchronized with particular skylight conditions.
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Japanese Quail’s Genetic Background Modulates Effects of Chronic Stress on Emotional Reactivity but Not Spatial Learning
Agathe Laurence,Cécilia Houdelier,Christophe Petton,Ludovic Calandreau,Cécile Arnould,Angélique Favreau-Peigné,Christine Leterrier,Alain Boissy,Marie-Annick Richard-Yris,Sophie Lumineau +9 more
TL;DR: According to an inverted U-shaped relationship between stress and cognition, chronic stress can improve the adaptability of birds to a stressful environment and increase of emotional reactivity and spatial abilities.
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Animal-to-robot social attachment: initial requisites in a gallinaceous bird.
L. Jolly,Florent Pittet,Jean-Pierre Caudal,Jean-Baptiste Mouret,Jean-Baptiste Mouret,Jean-Baptiste Mouret,Cécilia Houdelier,Sophie Lumineau,E. de Margerie +8 more
TL;DR: The necessary initial conditions for stable, cohesive mixed groups of chicks and robots, a promising tool to experiment on the long-term dynamics of social behaviour are revealed.
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Circadian rhythm of activity in Japanese quail in constant darkness: variability of clarity and possibility of selection.
TL;DR: The selection procedure did not seem to be based on the characteristics of the pacemaker itself, but rather on a downstream event, whereas crosses between two arrhythmic birds may also give rise to rhythmic birds.
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Emotionality modulates the effect of chronic stress on feeding behaviour in birds
Angélique Favreau-Peigné,Angélique Favreau-Peigné,Ludovic Calandreau,Paul Constantin,Bernard Gaultier,Aline Bertin,Cécile Arnould,Agathe Laurence,Marie-Annick Richard-Yris,Cécilia Houdelier,Sophie Lumineau,Alain Boissy,Christine Leterrier +12 more
TL;DR: Differences in feed motivation and emotional reactivity between lines under chronic stress suggested that they experienced different emotional state and use different ways to cope with it depending on their genetic background.