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Timothy M. Flemming

Researcher at Georgia State University

Publications -  25
Citations -  577

Timothy M. Flemming is an academic researcher from Georgia State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Endowment effect & Endowment. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 25 publications receiving 538 citations.

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Advanced Distributed Learning

Duane M. Rumbaugh, +183 more
TL;DR: The foreign military sales (FMS) customer should develop familiarity with the concepts and protocols of ADL since it will be in this medium that much of future computer based training will be developed.
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Responses to the Assurance game in monkeys, apes, and humans using equivalent procedures

TL;DR: This paper investigated how three primate species, capuchin monkeys, chimpanzees, and humans, played the Assurance (or Stag Hunt) game using procedures that were, to the best of their ability, the same across species, particularly with respect to training and pretesting.
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Disconnect in concept learning by rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta): judgment of relations and relations-between-relations.

TL;DR: The authors investigated the role that entropy measures, discriminative cues, and symbolic knowledge play for rhesus monkeys in the acquisition of the concepts of same and different for use in a computerized relational matching-to-sample task and suggested that entropy is not a variable on which monkeys are dependent.

Comparative Economics: Responses to the Assurance Game in Monkeys, Apes, and Humans Using Equivalent Procedures

TL;DR: Investigating how three primate species, capuchin monkeys, chimpanzees, and humans, played the Assurance (or Stag Hunt) game using procedures that were, to the best of the authors' ability, the same across species, finds evidence for similarity in decision-making processes across the order Primates.
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Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) do not form expectations based on their partner's outcomes.

TL;DR: Orangutans did not respond negatively to inequity, supporting previous findings and indicating that inequity responses in apes are likely a convergence based on either sociality or cooperative tendency, which highlights the need for additional comparative studies to understand better the function and evolution of social behaviors.