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Volumn 40, Issue 4, 2002, Pages 408-418
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Twenty-four-hour-old lambs rely more on maternal behavior than on the learning of individual characteristics to discriminate between their own and an alien mother
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Author keywords
Anosmia; Hearing; Lamb; Mother recognition; Selective bond; Sheep
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Indexed keywords
ANIMAL EXPERIMENT;
ANIMAL MODEL;
ANOSMIA;
ARTICLE;
CONTROLLED STUDY;
DISCRIMINATION LEARNING;
EXPERIENCE;
HABITUATION;
HEARING;
INDIVIDUALIZATION;
MATERNAL BEHAVIOR;
NONHUMAN;
PARENTAL BEHAVIOR;
POSTNATAL DEVELOPMENT;
RECOGNITION;
SHEEP;
SOCIAL INTERACTION;
SURVIVAL;
ANIMALS;
ANIMALS, NEWBORN;
DISCRIMINATION (PSYCHOLOGY);
FEMALE;
INDIVIDUALITY;
LEARNING;
MATERNAL BEHAVIOR;
OLFACTION DISORDERS;
SHEEP;
VOCALIZATION, ANIMAL;
LAMB;
OVIS;
OVIS ARIES;
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EID: 0036078555
PISSN: 00121630
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1002/dev.10041 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (42)
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References (74)
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