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Dive into the research topics where Natacha Mendes is active.

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Featured researches published by Natacha Mendes.


Biology Letters | 2007

Raising the level: orangutans use water as a tool.

Natacha Mendes; Daniel Hanus; Josep Call

We investigated the use of water as a tool by presenting five orangutans (Pongo abelii) with an out-of-reach peanut floating inside a vertical transparent tube. All orangutans collected water from a drinker and spat it inside the tube to get access to the peanut. Subjects required an average of three mouthfuls of water to get the peanut. This solution occurred in the first trial and all subjects continued using this successful strategy in subsequent trials. The latency to retrieve the reward drastically decreased after the first trial. Moreover, the latency between mouthfuls also decreased dramatically from the first mouthful in the first trial to any subsequent ones in the same trial or subsequent trials. Additional control conditions suggested that this response was not due to the mere presence of the tube, to the existence of water inside, or frustration at not getting the reward. The sudden acquisition of the behaviour, the timing of the actions and the differences with the control conditions make this behaviour a likely candidate for insightful problem solving.


Cognition | 2008

Ape Metaphysics: Object Individuation without Language.

Natacha Mendes; Hannes Rakoczy; Josep Call

Developmental research suggests that whereas very young infants individuate objects purely on spatiotemporal grounds, from (at latest) around 1 year of age children are capable of individuating objects according to the kind they belong to and the properties they instantiate. As the latter ability has been found to correlate with language, some have speculated whether it might be essentially language dependent and therefore uniquely human. Existing studies with non-human primates seem to speak against this hypothesis, but fail to present conclusive evidence due to methodological shortcomings. In the present experiments we set out to test non-linguistic object individuation in three great ape species with a refined manual search methodology. Experiment 1 tested for spatiotemporal object individuation: Subjects saw 1 or 2 objects simultaneously being placed inside a box in which they could reach, and then in both conditions only found 1 object. After retrieval of the 1 object, subjects reached again significantly more often when they had seen 2 than when they had seen 1 object. Experiment 2 tested for object individuation according to property/kind information only: Subjects saw 1 object being placed inside the box, and then either found that object (expected) or an object of a different kind (unexpected). Analogously to Experiment 1, after retrieval of the 1 object, subjects reached again significantly more often in the unexpected than in the expected condition. These results thus confirm previous findings suggesting that individuating objects according to their property/kind is neither uniquely human nor essentially language dependent. It remains to be seen, however, whether this kind of object individuation requires sortal concepts as human linguistic thinkers use them, or whether some simpler form of tracking properties is sufficient.


Scientific Data | 2015

A high resolution 7-Tesla resting-state fMRI test-retest dataset with cognitive and physiological measures

Krzysztof J. Gorgolewski; Natacha Mendes; Domenica Wilfling; Elisabeth Wladimirow; Claudine Joëlle Gauthier; Tyler Bonnen; Florence J. M. Ruby; Robert Trampel; Pierre-Louis Bazin; Roberto Cozatl; Jonathan Smallwood; Daniel S. Margulies

Here we present a test-retest dataset of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data acquired at rest. 22 participants were scanned during two sessions spaced one week apart. Each session includes two 1.5 mm isotropic whole-brain scans and one 0.75 mm isotropic scan of the prefrontal cortex, giving a total of six time-points. Additionally, the dataset includes measures of mood, sustained attention, blood pressure, respiration, pulse, and the content of self-generated thoughts (mind wandering). This data enables the investigation of sources of both intra- and inter-session variability not only limited to physiological changes, but also including alterations in cognitive and affective states, at high spatial resolution. The dataset is accompanied by a detailed experimental protocol and source code of all stimuli used.


American Journal of Primatology | 2014

Chimpanzees form long-term memories for food locations after limited exposure

Natacha Mendes; Josep Call

Remembering the location of fruiting trees for extended periods of time has been hypothesized to play a major role in the evolution of primate cognition. Such ability would be especially useful when paired with a fast learning mechanism capable of consolidating long‐term memory after minimal exposure. We investigated whether chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) can remember different food locations after minimal exposure (i.e., 1–2 trials) both after 24 hr and after 3‐month. We released pairs of chimpanzees in their indoor enclosure (the enclosure of group A measured 430 m2 and group Bs measured 175 m2) and tested them for four consecutive days (Baseline, Test, Retest, and Post‐test). During the Test and Retest food was hidden in the same location whereas no food was hidden during the Baseline and Post‐test days (control trials). Subjects were tested with four different locations and assessed for their retention after 24 hr and 3‐month since the initial food discovery. Results revealed that chimpanzees accurately remembered the locations in which they found the food after one or two exposures to them, and both after 24 hr and a 3‐month retention interval. Am. J. Primatol. 76:485–495, 2014.


Animal Cognition | 2011

Primates do not spontaneously use shape properties for object individuation: a competence or a performance problem?

Natacha Mendes; Hannes Rakoczy; Josep Call

Several recent studies have documented that non-human primates can individuate objects according to property and/or kind information in much the same way as human infants do from around one year of age when they begin to acquire language. Some studies suggest, however, that only some properties are used for the individuation of food items: color, but not shape. The present study investigated whether these findings reveal a true competence problem with shape properties in the food domain or whether they merely reveal a performance problem (e.g., lack of attention to shapes). We tested 25 great apes (chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas) in two food individuation tasks. We manipulated subjects’ experience with differences in color and shape properties of food items. Results indicated (i) that all subjects, regardless of their prior experience, solved the color-based object individuation task and (ii) that only the group with previous experience with different shape properties succeeded in the shape-based individuation task. Great apes can thus be primed to take shape into account for individuating food objects, and this results clearly speaks in favor of a performance (rather than a competence) problem in using shape for object individuation of food items.


Nature Human Behaviour | 2018

Preschool children and chimpanzees incur costs to watch punishment of antisocial others

Natacha Mendes; Nikolaus Steinbeis; Nereida Bueno-Guerra; Josep Call; Tania Singer

When misfortune befalls another, humans may feel distress, leading to a motivation to escape. When such misfortune is perceived as justified, however, it may be experienced as rewarding and lead to motivation to witness the misfortune. We explored when in human ontogeny such a motivation emerges and whether the motivation is shared by chimpanzees. Chimpanzees and four- to six-year-old children learned through direct interaction that an agent was either prosocial or antisocial and later saw each agent’s punishment. They were given the option to invest physical effort (chimpanzees) or monetary units (children) to continue watching. Chimpanzees and six-year-olds showed a preference for watching punishment of the antisocial agent. An additional control experiment in chimpanzees suggests that these results cannot be attributed to more generic factors such as scene coherence or informational value seeking. This indicates that both six-year-olds and chimpanzees have a motivation to watch deserved punishment enacted.Steinbeis and colleagues show that chimpanzees and six-year-old children will pay a cost to see the punishment of an antisocial agent when it is deserved, suggesting that both are motivated to see just punishment enacted.


Nature Human Behaviour | 2018

Author Correction: Preschool children and chimpanzees incur costs to watch punishment of antisocial others

Natacha Mendes; Nikolaus Steinbeis; Nereida Bueno-Guerra; Josep Call; Tania Singer

In the version of this Article originally published, in Fig. 2c the hatching indicating antisocial behaviour was on the wrong data bars. This has now been corrected in the Article.


bioRxiv | 2017

A functional connectome phenotyping dataset including cognitive state and personality measures

Natacha Mendes; Sabine Oligschlaeger; Mark E. Lauckner; Johannes Golchert; Julia M. Huntenburg; Marcel Falkiewicz; Melissa Ellamil; Sarah Krause; Blazej M. Baczkowski; Roberto Cozatl; Anastasia Osoianu; Deniz Kumral; Jared Pool; Laura Golz; Maria Dreyer; Philipp Haueis; Rebecca Jost; Yelyzaveta Kramarenko; Haakon G. Engen; Katharina Ohrnberger; Krzysztof J. Gorgolewski; Nicolas Farrugia; Anahit Babayan; Andrea Reiter; H. Lina Schaare; Janis Reinelt; Josefin Roebbig; Marie Uhlig; Miray Erbey; Michael Gaebler

The dataset enables exploration of higher-order cognitive faculties, self-generated mental experience, and personality features in relation to the intrinsic functional architecture of the brain. We provide multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data and a broad set of state and trait phenotypic assessments: mind-wandering, personality traits, and cognitive abilities. Specifically, 194 healthy participants (between 20 and 75 years of age) filled out 31 questionnaires, performed 7 tasks, and reported 4 probes of in-scanner mind-wandering. The scanning session included four 15.5-min resting-state functional MRI runs using a multiband EPI sequence and a high-resolution structural scan using a 3D MP2RAGE sequence. This dataset constitutes one part of the MPI-Leipzig Mind-Brain-Body database.


bioRxiv | 2017

Association of Peripheral Blood Pressure with Grey Matter Volume in 19- to 40-Year-Old Adults

H. Lina Schaare; Shahrzad Kharabian Masouleh; Frauke Beyer; Deniz Kumral; Marie Uhlig; Janis Reinelt; Andrea Reiter; Leonie Lampe; Anahit Babayan; Miray Erbey; Josefin Roebbig; Matthias L. Schroeter; Hadas Okon-Singer; Karsten Mueller; Natacha Mendes; Daniel S. Margulies; A. Veronica Witte; Michael Gaebler; Arno Villringer

Objective To test whether elevated blood pressure (BP) relates to grey matter volume (GMV) changes in young adults who had not previously been diagnosed as hypertensive (systolic BP (SBP)/diastolic BP (DBP)≥140/90 mmHg). Methods We associated BP with GMV from structural 3 Tesla T1-weighted MRI of 423 healthy adults between 19-40 years (mean age=27.7±5.3 years, 177 women, SBP/DBP=123.2/73.4±12.2/8.5 mmHg). Data originated from four previously unpublished cross-sectional studies conducted in Leipzig, Germany. We performed voxel-based morphometry on each study separately and combined results in image-based meta-analyses (IBMA) to assess cumulative effects across studies. Resting BP was assigned to one of four categories: (1) SBP<120 and DBP<80 mmHg, (2) SBP 120-129 or DBP 80-84 mmHg, (3) SBP 130-139 or DBP 85-89 mmHg, (4) SBP≥140 or DBP≥90 mmHg. Results IBMA yielded: (a) lower regional GMV was correlated with higher peripheral BP; (b) lower GMV with higher BP when comparing individuals in sub-hypertensive categories 3 and 2, respectively, to those in category 1; (c) lower BP-related GMV was found in regions including hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, frontal and parietal structures (e.g. precuneus). Conclusions BP≥120/80 mmHg was associated with lower GMV in regions that have previously been related to GM decline in older individuals with manifest hypertension. Our study shows that BP-associated GM alterations emerge continuously across the range of BP and earlier in adulthood than previously assumed. This suggests that treating hypertension or maintaining lower BP in early adulthood might be essential for preventing the pathophysiological cascade of asymptomatic cerebrovascular disease to symptomatic end-organ damage, such as stroke or dementia.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Comparing the Performances of Apes (Gorilla gorilla, Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus) and Human Children (Homo sapiens) in the Floating Peanut Task

Daniel Hanus; Natacha Mendes; Claudio Tennie; Josep Call

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Hannes Rakoczy

University of Göttingen

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