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Jays are sensitive to cognitive illusions.

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TLDR
In a previous study as mentioned in this paper, we found that Jays hide food caches, steal them from conspecifics and use tactics to minimize cache theft, and are sensitive to the content of their own caches, retrieving items depending on their preferences.
Abstract
Jays hide food caches, steal them from conspecifics and use tactics to minimize cache theft. Jays are sensitive to the content of their own caches, retrieving items depending on their preferences a...

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Perspectives Organize Information in Mind and Nature: Empirical Findings of Point-View Perspective (P) in Cognitive and Material Complexity

TL;DR: Cabrera as discussed by the authors provided empirical evidence for the phenomena of point-view perspective taking (P-rule) as a universal pattern/structure of systems thinking, a field in which scholarly debate is often based on invalidated opinioned frameworks.
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DSRP Theory: A Primer

Derek Cabrera, +1 more
- 02 Mar 2022 - 
TL;DR: DSRP Theory is now over 25 years old with more empirical evidence supporting it than any other systems thinking framework as mentioned in this paper . Yet, it is often misunderstood and described in ways that are inaccurate.
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Relationships Organize Information in Mind and Nature: Empirical Findings of Action-Reaction Relationships (R) in Cognitive and Material Complexity

TL;DR: Action Reaction Relationships (R-rule) as mentioned in this paper is a formal description of and predictions of action-reaction relations (R) or R-rule, which are transdisciplinary and synonymous with connections, links, edges and interconnections.
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Distinctions Organize Information in Mind and Nature: Empirical Findings of Identity-Other Distinctions (D) in Cognitive and Material Complexity

TL;DR: Cabrera as discussed by the authors provides a formal description of and predictions for identity-other distinctions (D) or "D-rule" as one of four universals for the organization of information that is foundational to systems and systems thinking, as well as the consilience of knowledge.
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Systems Organize Information in Mind and Nature: Empirical Findings of Part-Whole Systems (S) in Cognitive and Material Complexity

TL;DR: In this article , seven empirical studies are presented in which (unless otherwise noted) subjects completed a task and the sample sizes vary for each study but are generalizeable to a normal distribution of the US population.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in prospect theory: cumulative representation of uncertainty

TL;DR: Cumulative prospect theory as discussed by the authors applies to uncertain as well as to risky prospects with any number of outcomes, and it allows different weighting functions for gains and for losses, and two principles, diminishing sensitivity and loss aversion, are invoked to explain the characteristic curvature of the value function and the weighting function.
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Bad is Stronger than Good

TL;DR: The authors found that bad is stronger than good, as a general principle across a broad range of psychological phenomena, such as bad emotions, bad parents, bad feedback, and bad information is processed more thoroughly than good.
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Asymmetrical effects of positive and negative events: The mobilization-minimization hypothesis.

TL;DR: It is concluded that no single theoretical mechanism can explain the mobilization-minimization pattern, but that a family of integrated process models, encompassing different classes of responses, may account for this pattern of parallel but disparately caused effects.
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A practical solution to the pervasive problems of p values.

TL;DR: The BIC provides an approximation to a Bayesian hypothesis test, does not require the specification of priors, and can be easily calculated from SPSS output.
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Episodic-like memory during cache recovery by scrub jays

TL;DR: It is shown that scrub jays remember ‘when’ food items are stored by allowing them to recover perishable ‘wax worms’ (wax-moth larvae) and non-perishable peanuts which they had previously cached in visuospatially distinct sites.
Trending Questions (1)
Which senses do scavenging raptors use to find food?

The provided paper is about jays and their cognitive abilities, not about scavenging raptors. The paper does not provide information about the senses scavenging raptors use to find food.