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Dive into the research topics where Gordon G. Gallup is active.

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Featured researches published by Gordon G. Gallup.


Science | 1970

Chimpanzees: Self-Recognition

Gordon G. Gallup

After prolonged exposure to their reflected images in mirrors, chimpanzees marked with red dye showed evidence of being able to recognize their own reflections. Monkeys did not appear to have this capacity.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 1985

Do minds exist in species other than our own

Gordon G. Gallup

An answer to the question of animal awareness depends on evidence, not intuition, anecdote, or debate. This paper examines some of the problems inherent in an analysis of animal awareness, and whether animals might be aware of being aware is offered as a more meaningful distinction. A framework is presented which can be used to make a determination about the extent to which other species have experiences similar to ours based on their ability to make inferences and attributions about mental states in others. The evidence from both humans and animals is consistent with the idea that the capacity to use experience to infer the experience of others is a byproduct of self-awareness.


Journal of Human Evolution | 1981

Self-recognition in chimpanzees and orangutans, but not gorillas

Susan D. Suarez; Gordon G. Gallup

Recognition of ones own reflection in a mirror qualifies as an objective test of self-awareness. Although most primates appear incapable of learning that their behavior is the source of the behavior depicted in a mirror, the present study replicates previous reports showing that both chimpanzees and orangutans are capable of self-recognition. As the only remaining species of great ape, gorillas were also systematically tested with mirrors. Using a specially designed control procedure which provides independent evidence of interest in and motivation to touch unobtrusively applied marks used to assess self-recognition, gorillas appeared unable to correctly decipher mirrored information about themselves.


Cognitive Brain Research | 2003

Contagious yawning: the role of self-awareness and mental state attribution.

Steven M. Platek; Samuel R. Critton; Thomas E. Myers; Gordon G. Gallup

Contagious yawning is a common, but poorly understood phenomenon. We hypothesized that contagious yawning is part of a more general phenomenon known as mental state attribution (i.e. the ability to inferentially model the mental states of others). To test this hypothesis we compared susceptibility to contagiously yawn with performance on a self-face recognition task, several theory of mind stories, and on a measure of schizotypal personality traits. Consistent with the hypothesis, susceptibility to contagiously yawn was positively related to performance on self-face recognition and faux pas theory of mind stories, and negatively related to schizotypal personality traits. These data suggest that contagious yawning may be associated with empathic aspects of mental state attribution and are negatively affected by increases in schizotypal personality traits much like other self-processing related tasks.


Neuropsychologia | 1999

Left hand advantage in a self-face recognition task

Julian Paul Keenan; Bruce McCutcheon; Stefanie Freund; Gordon G. Gallup; Glenn Sanders; Alvaro Pascual-Leone

Subjects were exposed to pictures of self and others (e.g., friend, stranger, and famous people) to determine if there was an advantage in reaction time and accuracy in identifying the self. It was found that upright and inverted self-faces were identified more rapidly than non-self faces when subjects responded with their left hand, which in other tasks has corresponded with contralateral hemispheric dominance. These data suggest that self-recognition may be correlated with neural activity in the right hemisphere, and that the differences observed may not be unique to self-face recognition. These results are in agreement with previous research indicating that self-directed awareness is correlated with right prefrontal activity.


Animal Behaviour | 1980

An ethological analysis of open-field behaviour in chickens

Gordon G. Gallup; Susan D. Suarez

Abstract Two salient but previously unacknowledged aspects of open-field testing involve contact with a potential predator, as a consequence of placement in the open field by a human, and separation from imprinted companions. As a result we propose that open-field behaviour in chickens (Gallus gallus) represents a compromise between opposing tendencies to reinstate contact with conspecifics and minimize detection in the face of possible predation. Five experiments were conducted to test various implications of this model. Manipulations designed to enhance the predatory overtones of open-field testing were found to postpone reinstatement behaviours (e.g. distress calling and escape attempts) and prolong behaviours that serve to minimize detection (e.g freezing). Unlike the more traditional view of open-field behaviour as an index of general emotionality, our model suggests that the principal reason for movement is based on attempts to reinstate social contact. In support of the model, birds tested in the presence of cagemates showed significantly longer durations of freezing than those tested individually. The same was true for birds maintained in social isolation for two days prior to testing. The applicability of this approach to conceptualizing the behaviour of chickens in the open field is discussed, and the supposed relationship between fear and distress calling is critically evaluated.


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2002

Reactions to children's faces: Resemblance affects males more than females

Steven M. Platek; Rebecca L. Burch; Ivan S Panyavin; Brett H Wasserman; Gordon G. Gallup

Abstract Since cuckoldry risk is asymmetrical, we hypothesized that parental investment would be more affected by paternal than maternal resemblance. To test this hypothesis, we asked subjects hypothetical questions about investing in children under conditions in which their faces or those of other people had been morphed with photographs of children. Males were more likely to choose a face they had been morphed with as the most attractive, the child they were most likely to adopt, the child they would like to spend the most time with, the child they would spend US


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2003

Sex differences in morphological predictors of sexual behavior: Shoulder to hip and waist to hip ratios

Susan M. Hughes; Gordon G. Gallup

50 on, and the child they would least resent having to pay child support for. Reactions to childrens faces by females were much less affected by resemblance.


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2002

The sound of symmetry: Voice as a marker of developmental instability

Susan M. Hughes; Marissa A. Harrison; Gordon G. Gallup

Abstract Differences exist between males and females in fat distribution, skeletal morphology, muscle mass, and body shape. We investigated sex differences in shoulder to hip ratios (SHR) and waist to hip ratios (WHR), and their relationships to different features of sexual behavior. Males with high SHR and females with low WHR reported sexual intercourse at an earlier age, more sexual partners, more extra-pair copulations (EPC), and having engaged in more instances of intercourse with people who were involved in another relationship (i.e., having themselves been EPC partners). The predictive value of these morphological features was highly sex-specific.


Behavioural Processes | 1998

Self-awareness and the evolution of social intelligence

Gordon G. Gallup

Abstract Low fluctuating asymmetry (FA, a measure of deviation from bilateral symmetry) appears to be a phenotypic marker of reproductive viability and health. In the present study, we investigated whether ratings of voice attractiveness were correlated with variations in FA. Several bilateral traits were measured to calculate a FA index and independent raters who did not know and never saw the subjects assessed the attractiveness of recordings of each subjects voice. Voices of subjects with greater bilateral symmetry were rated as more attractive by members of both sexes than those with asymmetrical traits.

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Rebecca L. Burch

State University of New York at Oswego

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Jack D. Maser

University of California

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Andrew C. Gallup

State University of New York at Oneonta

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Daniel J. Povinelli

University of Louisiana at Lafayette

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