The evolution of foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans? | Behavioral and Brain Sciences | Cambridge Core (original) (raw)
References
Albrecht, U. & Eichele, G. (2003) The mammalian circadian clock. Current Opinion in Genetics and Development 13(3):271–77.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alexander, R. D. (1989) Evolution of the human psyche. In: The human revolution : Behavioral and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans, ed. Mellars, P. & Stringer, C., pp. 455–531. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Anderson, J. R. & Schooler, L. J. (1991) Reflections of the environment in memory. Psychological Science 2:396–408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atance, C. M. & Meltzoff, A. N. (2005) My future self: Young children's ability to anticipate and explain future states. Cognitive Development 20:341–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Psychological Science 17(7):583–87.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Atance, C. M. & O'Neill, D. K. (2005) The emergence of episodic future thinking in humans. Learning and Motivation 36(2):126–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Babb, S. J. & Crystal, J. D. (2005) Discrimination of what, when, and where: Implications for episodic-like memory in rats. Learning and Motivation 36:177–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bard, K., Todd, B. K., Bernier, C., Love, J. & Leavens, D. A. (2006) Self-awareness in human and chimpanzee infants: What is measured and what is meant by the mark and mirror test. Infancy 9:191–219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, L., Henzi, P. & Dunbar, R. (2003) Primate cognition: From “what now?” to “what if?” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7(11):494–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bateson, P. (2004) Evolution and learning: The Baldwin effect reconsidered. Biology and Philosophy 19(2):283–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bischof, N. (1985) Das Rätzel Ödipus [The Oedipus riddle]. Piper.Google Scholar
Bischof-Köhler, D. (1985) Zur Phylogenese menschlicher Motivation [On the phylogeny of human motivation]. In: Emotion und Reflexivität, ed. Eckensberger, L. H. & Lantermann, E. D., pp. 3–47. Urban & Schwarzenberg.Google Scholar
Browning, R. (1896) The poetical works. Smith, Elder & Co.Google Scholar
Bugnyar, T. & Heinrich, B. (2006) Pilfering ravens, Corvus corax, adjust their behavior to social context and identity of competitors. Animal Cognition 9:369–76.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burke, D. & Fulham, B. J. (2003) An evolved spatial memory bias in a nectar-feeding bird. Animal Behavior 66:695–701.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Busby, J. & Suddendorf, T. (2005) Recalling yesterday and predicting tomorrow. Cognitive Development 20(3):362–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Call, J. (2004) Inferences about the location of food in the great apes (Pan pansicus, Pan troglodytes, Gorilla gorilla, and Pongo pygmaeus). Journal of Comparative Psychology 118:232–41.Google Scholar
Call, J. (2005) The self and other: A missing link in comparative social cognition. In: The missing link in cognition, ed. Terrace, H. S. & Metcalfe, J., pp. 321–41. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Call, J. & Carpenter, M. (2001) Do chimpanzees and children know what they have seen? Animal Cognition 4:207–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Call, J., Hare, B. & Tomasello, M. (1998) Chimpanzee gaze following in an object choice task. Animal Cognition 1:89–99.Google Scholar
Calvin, W. H. (1982) Did throwing stones shape hominid brain evolution? Ethology and Sociobiology 3(3):115–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, N. S., Bussey, T. J. & Dickinson, A. (2003) Can animals recall the past and plan for the future? Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4:685–91.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clayton, N. S. & Dickinson, A. (1998) Episodic-like memory during cache recovery by scrub jays. Nature 395:272–78.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clayton, N. S., Yu, K. S. & Dickinson, A. (2001) Scrub Jays (Aphelocoma coerulescens) form integrated memories of the multiple features of caching episodes. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes 27:17–29.Google ScholarPubMed
Collier-Baker, E. & Suddendorf, T. (2006) Do chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and 2-year-old children (Homo sapiens) understand double invisible displacement? Journal of Comparative Psychology 120:89–97.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conway, M., Singer, J. A. & Tagini, A. (2004) The self and autobiographical memory: Correspondence and coherence. Social Cognition 22:491–529.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corballis, M. C. (2003) Recursion as the key to the human mind. In: From mating to mentality: Evaluating evolutionary psychology, ed. Sterelny, K. & Fitness, J., pp. 155–71. Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Corballis, M. C. (2004) The origins of modernity: Was autonomous speech the critical factor? Psychological Review 111:543–52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corballis, M. C. (in press) Language, recursion, and starlings. Cognitive Science.Google Scholar
Corballis, M. C. & Suddendorf, T. (in press) Memory, time and language. In: What makes us human?, ed. Pasternak, C., pp. 17–36. Oneworld.Google Scholar
Dally, J. M., Clayton, N. S. & Emery, N. J. (2006a) The behavior and evolution of cache protection and pilferage. Animal Behavior 72:13–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dally, J. M., Emery, N. J. & Clayton, N. S. (2006b) Food-caching western scrub-jays keep track of who was watching when. Science 312(5780):1662–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Argembeau, A. & Van der Linden, M. (2004) Phenomenal characteristics associated with projecting oneself back into the past and forward into the future: Influence of valence and temporal distance. Consciousness and Cognition 13:844–58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Deacon, T. (1997) The symbolic species: The co-evolution of language and the brain. W.W. Norton.Google Scholar
Dennett, D. C. (1995) Darwin's dangerous idea. Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Dere, E., Huston, J. P. & Silva, M. A. S. (2005) Episodic-like memory in mice: Simultaneous assessment of object, place and temporal order memory. Brain Research Protocols 16(1–3):10–19.Google Scholar
Dretske, F. I. (1982) The informational character of representation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5:376–77.Google Scholar
Dudai, Y. & Carruthers, M. (2005a) Memory: Some systems in the brain may be better equipped to handle the future than the past. Nature 434:567.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbar, R. I. M. (2003) The social brain: Mind, language, and society in evolutionary perspective. Annual Review of Anthropology 32:163–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eacott, M. J., Easton, A. & Zinkivskay, A. (2005) Recollection in an episodic-like memory task in the rat. Learning and Memory 12(3):221–23.Google Scholar
Eichenbaum, H., Fortin, N. J., Ergorul, C., Wright, S. P. & Agster, K. L. (2005) Episodic recollection in animals: “If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck…” Learning and Motivation 36(2):190–207.Google Scholar
Emery, N. J. & Clayton, N. S. (2001) Effects of experience and social context on prospective caching strategies by scrub jays. Nature 414:443–46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Emery, N. J. & Clayton, N. S. (2004) The mentality of crows: Convergent evolution of intelligence in corvids and apes. Science 306:1903–907.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Etscorn, F. & Stephens, R. (1973) Establishment of conditioned taste aversions with a 24-hour CS-US interval. Physiological Psychology 1:251–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fitch, W. T. & Hauser, M. D. (2004) Computational constraints on syntactic processing in a nonhuman primate. Science 303:377–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flinn, M. V., Geary, D. C. & Ward, C. V. (2005) Ecological dominance, social competition, and coalitionary arms races: Why humans evolved extraordinary intelligence. Evolution and Human Behavior 26:10–46.Google Scholar
Friedman, W. J. (1993) Memory for the time of past events. Psychological Bulletin 113(1):44–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, W. J. (2000) The development of children's knowledge of the times of future events. Child Development 71(4):913–32.. Learning and Motivation 36:145–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, W. J. & Kemp, S. (1998) The effects of elapsed time and retrieval on young children's judgements of the temporal distances of past events. Cognitive Development 13:335–67.Google Scholar
Garcia, J., Ervin, F. R. & Koelling, R. (1966) Learning with prolonged delay of reinforcement. Psychonomic Science 5:121–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garcia, J. & Koelling, R. (1966) Relation of cue to consequence in avoidance learning. Psychonomic Science 4:123–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, J. M., Ramponi, C. & Richardson-Klavehn, A. (2002) Recognition of memory and decision processes: A meta-analysis of remember, know, and guess responses. Memory 10(2):83–98.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gentner, T. O., Fenn, K. M., Margoliash, D. & Nusbaum, H. C. (2006) Recursive syntactic pattern learning by songbirds. Nature 440:1204–207.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gilbert, D. T., Gill, M. J. & Wilson, T. D. (2002) The future is now: Temporal correction in affective forecasting. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 88:430–44.Google Scholar
Gopnik, A. & Slaughter, V. (1991) Young children's understanding of changes in their mental states. Child Development 62(1):98–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hailman, J. P. & Ficken, M. S. (1986) Combinatorial animal communication with computable syntax: Chick-a-dee calling qualifies as “language” by structural linguistics. Animal Behavior 34:1899–901.Google Scholar
Haldane, J. B. S. (1927) A mathematical theory of natural and artificial selection, Part V: Selection and mutation. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 23:838–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hallos, J. (2005) “15 minutes of fame:” Exploring the temporal dimension of Middle Pleistocene lithic technology. Journal of Human Evolution 49:155–79.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hampton, R. R. (2001) Rhesus monkeys know when they remember. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 98(9):5359–62.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hampton, R. R., Hampstead, B. M. & Murray, E. A. (2005) Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) demonstrate robust memory for what and where, but not for when, in an open-field test of memory. Learning and Motivation 36:245–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hampton, R. R. & Schwartz, B. L. (2004) Episodic memory in nonhumans: What, and where, is when? Current Opinion in Neurobiology 14:192–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hare, B., Call, J., Agnetta, B. & Tomasello, M. (2000) Chimpanzees know what conspecifics do and do not see. Animal Behavior 59:771–85.Google Scholar
Hare, B., Call, J. & Tomasello, M. (2001) Do chimpanzees know what conspecifics know? Animal Behavior 61:139–51.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harner, L. (1975) Yesterday and tomorrow: Development of early understanding of the terms. Developmental Psychology 11(6):864–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hauser, M. D. (2001) Folk physics for apes – The chimpanzee's theory of how the world works. Science 291(5503):440–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hauser, M. D. (2003) Knowing about knowing: Dissociations between perception and action systems over evolution and during development. Annals of the New York Academy of Science 1001:79–103.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hauser, M. D., Chomsky, N. & Fitch, W. T. (2002) The faculty of language: What is it, who has it, and how did it evolve? Science 298:1569–79.Google Scholar
Hazlitt, W. (1805) An essay on the principles of human action. J. Johnson.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., Hurly, T. A., Bateson, M. & Healy, S. D. (2006) Timing in free-living rufous hummingbirds, Selasphorus rufus. Current Biology 16(5):512–15.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Henson, R. N. A., Rugg, M. D., Shallice, T., Josephs, O. & Dolan, R. J. (1999) Recollection and familiarity in recognition memory: An event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study. The Journal of Neuroscience 19:3962–72.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hesslow, G. (2002) Conscious thought as simulation of behavior and perception. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 6(6):242–47.Google Scholar
Holden, C. (2005) Time's up on time travel. Science 308:1110.Google Scholar
Hudson, J. A., Shapiro, L. R. & Sosa, B. B. (1995) Planning in the real world: Preschool children's scripts and plans for familiar events. Child Development 66(4):984–98.Google Scholar
Humphrey, N. (1976) The social function of intellect. In: Growing points in ethology, ed. Bateson, P. P. G. & Hinde, R. A.. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hunt, G. (1996) Manufacture and use of hook-tools by New Caledonian crows. Nature 379:249–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunt, G. & Gray, R. (2003) Diversification and cumulative evolution in New Caledonian crow tool manufacture. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B – Biological Sciences 270:867–74.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jerison, H. J. (1973) The evolution of the brain and intelligence. Academic Press.Google Scholar
Kali, S. & Dayan, P. (2004) Off-line replay maintains declarative memories in a model of hippocampal-neocortical interaction. Nature Neuroscience 7:286–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenward, B., Weir, A. A. S., Rutz, C. & Kacelnik, A. (2005) Tool manufacture by naive juvenile crows. Nature 433:121.Google Scholar
Klein, S. B., Cosmides, L., Tooby, J. & Chance, S. (2002a) Decisions and the evolution of memory: Multiple systems, multiple functions. Psychological Review 109:306–29.Google Scholar
Klein, S. B., Loftus, J. & Kihlstrom, J. F. (2002b) Memory and temporal experience: The effects of episodic memory loss on an amnesic patient's ability to remember the past and imagine the future. Social Cognition 20:353–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroodsma, D. E. & Momose, H. (1991) Songs of the Japanese population of the winter wren (Troglodytes troglodytes). The Condor 93:424–32.Google Scholar
Lea, S. E. G. (2001) Anticipation and memory as criteria for special welfare consideration. Animal Welfare 10(S):195–208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leaver, L. A., Hopewell, L., Cadwell, C. & Mallarky, L. (in press) Audience effects on foodcaching in grey squirrels. Animal Cognition.Google Scholar
Levine, B. (2004) Autobiographical memory and the self in time: Brain lesion effects, functional neuroanatomy, and lifespan development. Brain and Cognition 55:54–68.Google Scholar
Lewis, P. A. & Miall, R. C. (2006) Remembering the time: A continuous clock. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 10:401–406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loftus, E. F. & Ketcham, K. (1994) The myth of repressed memory. St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
McKenzie, T. L. B., Bird, L. R. & Roberts, W. A. (2005) The effects of cache modification on food caching and retrieval behavior by rats. Learning and Motivation 36(2):260–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menzel, E. (2005) Progress in the study of chimpanzee recall and episodic memory. In: The missing link in cognition, ed. Terrace, H. S. & Metcalfe, J., pp. 188–224. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mercado, E., Murray, S. O., Uyeyama, R. K., Pack, A. A. & Herman, L. M. (1998) Memory for recent actions in the bottlenosed dolphin (Tursiops truncatus): Repetition of arbitrary behaviors using an abstract rule. Animal Learning and Behavior 26(2):210–18.Google Scholar
Mischel, H. N. & Mischel, W. (1983) The development of children's knowledge of self-control strategies. Child Development 54:603–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miyashita, Y. (2004) Cognitive memory: Cellular and network machineries and their top-down control. Science 306:435–40.Google Scholar
Moore, C., Barresi, J. & Thompson, C. (1998) The cognitive basis of future-oriented prosocial behavior. Social Development 7(2):198–218.Google Scholar
Mulcahy, N. J. & Call, J. (2006) Apes save tools for future use. Science 312:1038–40.Google Scholar
Mulcahy, N. J., Call, J. & Dunbar, R. I. M. (2005) Gorillas (Gorilla gorilla) and orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) encode relevant problem features in a tool-using task. Journal of Comparative Psychology 119:23–32.Google Scholar
Nielsen, M., Collier-Baker, E., Davis, J. & Suddendorf, T. (2005) Imitation recognition in a captive chimpanzee (Pan Troglodytes). Animal Cognition 8:31–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nielsen, M., Suddendorf, T. & Slaughter, V. (2006) Self-recognition beyond the face. Child Development 77:176–85.Google Scholar
Odling-Smee, F. J., Laland, K. K. & Feldman, M. W. L. (2003) Niche construction: The neglected process in evolution. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
O'Doherty, J. P. (2004) Reward representations and reward-related learning in the human brain: Insights from neuroimaging. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 14:769–76.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O'Doherty, J. P., Deichmann, R., Critchley, H. D. & Dolan, R. J. (2002) Neural responses during anticipation of a primary taste reward. Neuron 33(5):815–26.Google Scholar
Okuda, J., Fujii, T., Ohtake, H., Tsukiura, T., Tanji, K., Suzuki, K., Kawashima, R., Fukuda, H., Itoh, M. & Yamadori, A. (2003) Thinking of the future and past: The roles of the frontal pole and the medial temporal lobes. Neuroimage 19:1369–80.Google Scholar
Osvath, M. & Gärdenfors, P. (2005) Oldowan culture and the evolution of anticipatory cognition. Lund University Cognitive Studies 122:1–16.Google Scholar
Patterson, F. & Cohen, R. H. (1994) Self-recognition and self-awareness in lowland gorillas. In: Self-awareness in animal and humans, ed. Parker, S. T., Mitchell, R. W. & Boccia, M. L., pp. 273–90. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perner, J. (1991) Understanding the representational mind. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Pinker, S. (2003) Language as an adaptation to the cognitive niche. In: Language evolution, ed. Christiansen, M. H. & Kirby, S., pp. 16–37. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Povinelli, D. J. (2000) Folk physics for apes. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Premack, D. & Woodruff, G. (1978) Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1:515–26.Google Scholar
Roediger, H. L. III & McDermott, K. B. (1995) Creating false memories remembering words not presented in lists. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition 21:803–14.Google Scholar
Rubin, D. C. & Schulkind, M. D. (1997) Distribution of important and word-cued autobiographical memories in 20-, 35-, and 70-year-old adults. Psychology and Aging 12(3):524–35.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schacter, D. L. (1996) Searching for memory: The brain, the mind, and the past. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Scheumann, M. & Call, J. (2006) Sumatran orangutans and a yellow-cheeked crested gibbon know what is where. International Journal of Primatology 27(2):575–602.Google Scholar
Schoenemann, P. T., Sheenan, M. J. & Glotzer, L. D. (2005) Prefrontal white matter volume is disproportionately larger in humans than in other primates. Nature Neuroscience 8:242–52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schultz, W. (2006) Behavioral theories and the neurophysiology of reward. Annual Review of Psychology 57:87–115.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schwartz, B. L. & Evans, S. (2001) Episodic memory in primates. American Journal of Primatology 55(2):71–85.Google Scholar
Schwartz, B. L., Colon, M. R., Sanchez, I. C., Rodriguez, I. A. & Evans, S. (2002) Single-trial learning of “what” and “who” information in a gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla): Implications for episodic memory. Animal Cognition 5(2):85–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, B. L., Hoffman, M. L. & Evans, S. (2005) Episodic-like memory in a gorilla: A review and new findings. Learning and Motivation 36(2):226–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Semendeferi, K., Armstrong, E., Schleicher, A., Zilles, K. & van Hoesen, G. W. (1998) Limbic frontal cortex in hominoids: A comparative study of area 13. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 106:129–55.3.0.CO;2-L>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Semendeferi, K., Armstrong, E., Schleicher, A., Zilles, K. & van Hoesen, G. W. (2001) Prefrontal cortex in humans and apes: A comparative study of area 10. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 114:224–41.Google Scholar
Semendeferi, K., Damasio, H. & Frank, R. (1997) The evolution of the frontal lobes: A volumetric analysis based on three-dimensional reconstructions of magnetic resonance scans of human and ape brains. Journal of Human Evolution 32:375–88.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Seyfarth, R. M., Cheney, D. L. & Bergman, T. J. (2005) Primate social cognition and the origins of language. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9:264–66.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shettleworth, S. J. & Sutton, J. E. (2006) Do animals know what they know? In: Rational animals?, ed. Hurley, S. & Nudds, M., pp. 235–46. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, C. C. & Reichman, O. J. (1984) The evolution of food caching by birds and mammals. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 15:329–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, J. D., Shields, W. E. & Washburn, D. A. (2003) The comparative psychology of uncertainty monitoring and metacognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26(3):317.Google Scholar
Son, L. K. & Kornell, N. (2005) Metaconfidence judgements in rhesus macaques: Explicit versus implicit mechanisms. In: The missing link in cognition, ed. Terrace, H. S. & Metcalfe, J., pp. 296–320. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Spreng, R. N. & Levine, B. (2006) The temporal distribution of past and future autobiographical events across the lifespan. Memory and Cognition 34:1644–51.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Squire, L. R. (1992) Declarative and nondeclarative memory: Multiple brain systems supporting learning and memory. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 4(3):232–43.Google Scholar
Steele, M. A., Turner, G., Smallwood, P. D., Wolff, J. O. & Radillo, J. (2001) Cache management by small mammals: Experimental evidence for the significance of acorn-embryo excision. Journal of Mammalogy 82(1):35–42.Google Scholar
Sterelny, K. (2003) Thought in a hostile world. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Suarez, S. & Gallup, G. G. (1981) Self recognition in chimpanzees and orangutans, but not gorillas. Journal of Human Evolution 10:175–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suddendorf, T. (1994) Discovery of the fourth dimension: Mental time travel and human evolution. Unpublished Masters thesis, University of Waikato, Hamilton. Available at: http://cogprints.org/729/Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. (1999) The rise of the metamind. In: The descent of mind: Psychological perspectives on hominid evolution, ed. Corballis, M. C. & ea, S. E. G., pp. 218–60. Oxford University Press. Available at: http://cogprints.org/732/Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. (2004) How primatology can inform us about the evolution of the human mind. Australian Psychologist 39(3):180–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Busby, J. (2003a) Like it or not? The mental time travel debate. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7:437–38.Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Busby, J. (2003b) Mental time travel in animals? Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7(9):391–396Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Busby, J. (2005) Making decisions with the future in mind: Developmental and comparative identification of mental time travel. Learning and Motivation 36(2):110–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Corballis, M. C. (1997) Mental time travel and the evolution of the human mind. Genetic Social and General Psychology Monographs 123(2):133–67. Available at: http://cogprints.org/725/Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Whiten, A. (2001) Mental evolution and development: Evidence for secondary representation in children, great apes and other animals. Psychological Bulletin 127(5):629–50.Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. & Whiten, A. (2003) Reinterpreting the mentality of apes. In: From mating to mentality: Evaluating evolutionary psychology, ed. Sterelny, K. & Fitness, J., pp 173–96. Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Szagun, G. (1978) On the frequency of use of tenses in English and German children's spontaneous speech. Child Development 49:898–901.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanaka, S. C., Doya, K., Okada, G., Ueda, K., Okamoto, Y. & Yamawaki, S. (2004) Prediction of immediate and future rewards differentially recruits cortico-basal ganglia loops. Nature Neuroscience 7:887–93.Google Scholar
Thieme, H. (1997) Lower Palaeolithic hunting spears from Germany. Nature 385(6619):807–10.Google Scholar
Thompson, C., Barresi, J. & Moore, C. (1997) The development of future-oriented prudence and altruism in preschoolers. Cognitive Development 12:199–212.Google Scholar
Thompson, N. S. (1969) Individual identification and temporal patterning in the cawing of common crows. Communications in Behavioral Biology 4:29–33.Google Scholar
Thorpe, C. M., Jacova, C. & Wilkie, D. M. (2004) Some pitfalls in measuring memory in animals. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 28(7):711–18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tomasello, M., Call, J. & Hare, B. (2003) Chimpanzees understand psychological states – The question is which ones and to what extent. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7:53–156.Google Scholar
Tomasello, M., Carpenter, M., Call, J., Behne, T. & Moll, H. (2005) Understanding and sharing intentions: The origins of cultural cognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28:675–735.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tooby, J. & DeVore, I. (1987) The reconstruction of hominid behavioral evolution through strategic modelling. In: The evolution of human behavior: Primate models, ed. Kinzey, W., pp. 183–238. State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (1972) Episodic and semantic memory. In: Organization of memory, ed. Tulving, E. & Donaldson, W., pp. 382–403. Academic Press.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (1984) Précis of Elements of episodic memory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7(2):223–68.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (1985) Memory and consciousness. Canadian Journal of Psychology 26:1–12.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (2005) Episodic memory and autonoesis: Uniquely human? In: The missing link in cognition: Origins of self-reflective consciousness, ed. Terrace, H. S. & Metcalfe, J., pp. 3–56. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uylings, H. B. M. (1990) The prefrontal cortex: Its structure, function, and pathology. Elsevier.Google Scholar
Wellman, H. M., Cross, D. & Watson, J. (2001) Meta-analysis of theory-of-mind development: The truth about false belief. Child Development 72:655–84.Google Scholar
Wheeler, M. A., Stuss, D. T. & Tulving, E. (1997) Toward a theory of episodic memory: The frontal lobes and autonoetic consciousness. Psychological Bulletin 121(3):331–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiten, A. (1998) Imitation of the sequential structure of actions by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Journal of Comparative Psychology 112:270–81.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Whiten, A. (2001) Folk physics for apes: The chimpanzee's theory of how the world works. Nature 409(6817):133.Google Scholar
Whiten, A. & Byrne, R. W. (1988) Tactical deception in primates. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11:233–73.Google Scholar
Whiten, A. & Suddendorf, T. (2001) Meta-representation and secondary representation. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 5:378.Google Scholar
Whiten, A. & Suddendorf, T. (in press) Great ape cognition and the evolutionary roots of human imagination. In: Imaginative minds, ed. Roth, I.. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Williams, J. M. G., Ellis, N. C., Tyers, C., Healy, H., Rose, G. & MacLeod, A. K. (1996) The specificity of autobiographical memory and imageability of the future Memory and Cognition 24:116–25.Google Scholar
Wilson, M. A. & McNaughton, B. L. (1994) Reactivation of Hippocampal Ensemble Memories During Sleep. Science 265(5172):676–79.Google Scholar
Wilson, T. D. & Gilbert, D. T. (2005) Affective forecasting: Knowing what to want. Current Directions in Psychological Science 14:131–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zentall, T. R., Clement, T. S., Bhatt, R. S. & Allen, J. (2001) Episodic-like memory in pigeons. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 8(4):685–90.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed