Katharina Brecht (@katharinabrecht) 's Twitter Profile
Katharina Brecht

@katharinabrecht

Research Management @dzne_en, Phd @Cambridge_Uni, Postdoc @uni_tue

ID: 1603561489

linkhttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Katharina_Brecht calendar_today18-07-2013 14:13:27

424 Tweet

399 Followers

618 Following

Ben Farrar (@bg_farrar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On Mark-Test Replication and Mirror Self-Recognition in Magpies. A very short commentary on replication of mirror mark tests in magpies by Freeberg - a good case study for student's when teaching replication {paywall} psycnet.apa.org/record/2020-88…

Mike Beran (@psychmikeb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

CALL FOR NEW EDITOR(S) Animal Behavior and Cognition is looking for a new editor or editors to begin in 2022. More information on the journal can be found at animalbehaviorandcognition.org. Please share widely, and send questions to [email protected] 1/8

Katharina Brecht (@katharinabrecht) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Just voted. Took 15 minutes, but only because we went to the wrong address first. Queue of two people. I dont understand people who dont vote in Germany - it's as easy and time consuming as going to the backery #Landtagswahl2021

Dr. Lauren Guillette (she/her) (@laurenguillette) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Postdoc alert!! 🚨 I am hiring a fully-funded postdoc. 2 years with option for renewal (+2 yrs) at $40K per year with benefits. Application review starts 15 July. Full details here: bit.ly/2SzedZN Animal Cognition Research Group: bit.ly/2XAFWKh Please RT

Postdoc alert!! 🚨 I am hiring a fully-funded postdoc.

2 years with option for renewal (+2 yrs) at $40K per year with benefits. 

Application review starts 15 July.

Full details here: bit.ly/2SzedZN 

Animal Cognition Research Group: bit.ly/2XAFWKh

Please RT
Julia Moser (@_juliamoser) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Today at 16:00 the second TübingenNeuroCampus #OpenScience Lecture takes place and we are happy to welcome @asch3tti who will educate us about “Normalizing transparency: The role of Open Science Communities.”

Ben Farrar (@bg_farrar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🔥🔥 article on reliability and science in comparative psychology by Dr Emma Tecwyn - so great to see articles like this published psyarxiv.com/95uvr

Dr Rachael Miller (Harrison) (@dr_rmiller) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our 10-lab international collaboration on the socio-ecological correlates of neophobia (responses to novelty) in corvids is now out in Current Biology: authors.elsevier.com/a/1e5eb3QW8Rwq…) 🧵 1/

Our 10-lab international collaboration on the socio-ecological correlates of neophobia (responses to novelty) in corvids is now out in <a href="/CurrentBiology/">Current Biology</a>: authors.elsevier.com/a/1e5eb3QW8Rwq…) 🧵 1/
Ben Farrar (@bg_farrar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🚨 New pre-print: Reporting and interpreting non-significant results in animal cognition research🚨 A big, multi-author project classifying how animal cognition researchers report negative results (1/5) psyarxiv.com/g9ja2

Stephen Ferrigno (@cognoriginslab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New evidence that crows (like children, adults, and monkeys) can represent center-embedded recursive sequences. Great work by Diana Liao, Katharina Brecht, Melissa Johnston, & A. Nieder (Full article here: science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…) wsj.com/articles/crows…

Ben Farrar (@bg_farrar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy our article on reporting and interpreting p>0.05 in animal behaviour and cognition has been published today in PeerJ - the Journal of Life & Environment! peerj.com/articles/14963 #AnimalBehavior #Statistics

New Scientist (@newscientist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Crows can make decisions based on probability, a cognitive ability rarely seen outside primates. newscientist.com/article/238133…

Diana Liao (@birb_brains) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our paper, Crows ‘count’ the number of self-generated vocalizations, is out! With this amazing team (Katharina Brecht, @lena_veit, A_Nieder), we uncovered that crows are able to control the number of vocalizations produced. science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…

Science Magazine (@sciencemagazine) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Crows can control the number of vocalizations they produce, “counting” up to four in response to visual and auditory cues. The results in Science suggest the birds show a level of vocal control that mirrors the early counting skills of human toddlers. scim.ag/76L

Crows can control the number of vocalizations they produce, “counting” up to four in response to visual and auditory cues. 

The results in Science suggest the birds show a level of vocal control that mirrors the early counting skills of human toddlers. scim.ag/76L