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Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D. C URRICULUM V ITAE 7/10/2020 Page 1 of 29 Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D. POSITION Professor, Emory University Department of Psychology and Associate Research Professor, Yerkes National Primate Research Center PERSONAL DATA US Citizen ADDRESS Emory University Department of Psychology 36 Eagle Row Atlanta GA 30322 Phone: 404-727-5853 Fax: 404-727-0372 E-mail: [email protected] http://www.psychology.emory.edu/lcpc RESEARCH My long-term research goal is to better understand human and nonhuman information processing through comparative studies of brain and cognition. I use a combination of semi-natural and conventional laboratory tests, combined with neurobiological approaches, to assess cognition. I have studied apes, monkeys, wild birds, rats, bats, mice, children, and adult humans. These investigations were conducted in the laboratory, using operant and open-field paradigms to measure cognitive function, and in the field with wild populations. I have used lesion studies, volumetric comparisons, pharmacological interventions, and comparative methods to assess brain function. POSITIONS Professor 2018; Associate Professor 2010; Assistant Professor 2004 Emory University, Department of Psychology, and Yerkes National Primate Research Center NIMH Research Fellow 2000-2004; NIMH IRTA Fellow, 1996-2000 Neurobehavioral studies of medial temporal lobe function in rhesus monkeys: learning, memory, and metacognition; Supervisor: Dr. Elisabeth A. Murray Ph.D. Psychology, 1995 University of Toronto Thesis: Hippocampal Complex Volume, Spatial Memory, and Food- Storing: Comparisons Between Black-Capped Chickadees and Dark-Eyed Juncos; Supervisor: Dr. Sara J. Shettleworth M.A. Psychology, 1990 University of Toronto Thesis: Memory Processes and Food-Storing: Responses of Black-Capped Chickadees to Systematic Cache Loss; Supervisor: Dr. David F. Sherry B.A. Psychology, 1988 Macalester College Independent Studies including Perception of Line of Gaze in House Sparrows AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION Learning, memory, and cognition in nonhuman primates; memory in wild birds Comparative cognition Behavioral neuroscience SPECIAL SKILLS Automated and semi-natural behavioral testing of nonhuman primate and avian cognition MRI-guided stereotaxic primate neurosurgery

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Page 1: POSITION ADDRESS

Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D. CURRICULU M V I TA E 7/10/2020 Page 1 of 29

Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D.

POSITION

Professor, Emory University Department of Psychology

and Associate Research Professor,

Yerkes National Primate Research Center

PERSONAL DATA

US Citizen

ADDRESS

Emory University

Department of Psychology

36 Eagle Row

Atlanta GA 30322

Phone: 404-727-5853

Fax: 404-727-0372

E-mail: [email protected]

http://www.psychology.emory.edu/lcpc

RESEARCH

My long-term research goal is to better understand human and nonhuman information processing

through comparative studies of brain and cognition. I use a combination of semi-natural and

conventional laboratory tests, combined with neurobiological approaches, to assess cognition.

I have studied apes, monkeys, wild birds, rats, bats, mice, children, and adult humans. These

investigations were conducted in the laboratory, using operant and open-field paradigms to measure

cognitive function, and in the field with wild populations. I have used lesion studies, volumetric

comparisons, pharmacological interventions, and comparative methods to assess brain function.

POSITIONS

Professor 2018; Associate

Professor 2010; Assistant

Professor 2004

Emory University, Department of Psychology, and Yerkes National

Primate Research Center

NIMH Research Fellow

2000-2004; NIMH IRTA

Fellow, 1996-2000

Neurobehavioral studies of medial temporal lobe function in rhesus

monkeys: learning, memory, and metacognition;

Supervisor: Dr. Elisabeth A. Murray

Ph.D. Psychology, 1995

University of Toronto

Thesis: Hippocampal Complex Volume, Spatial Memory, and Food-

Storing: Comparisons Between Black-Capped Chickadees and Dark-Eyed

Juncos; Supervisor: Dr. Sara J. Shettleworth

M.A. Psychology, 1990

University of Toronto

Thesis: Memory Processes and Food-Storing: Responses of Black-Capped

Chickadees to Systematic Cache Loss; Supervisor: Dr. David F. Sherry

B.A. Psychology, 1988

Macalester College

Independent Studies including Perception of Line of Gaze in House

Sparrows

AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION

Learning, memory, and cognition in nonhuman

primates; memory in wild birds

Comparative cognition

Behavioral neuroscience

SPECIAL SKILLS

Automated and semi-natural

behavioral testing of nonhuman

primate and avian cognition

MRI-guided stereotaxic primate

neurosurgery

Page 2: POSITION ADDRESS

Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D. CURRICULU M V I TA E 7/10/2020 Page 2 of 29

FUNDING AWARDED OR PENDING National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Research Experience for Undergraduates

Supplement to: Memory systems, metacognition, and cognitive control, $9,990 (7/9/20).

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Memory systems, metacognition, and cognitive

control, $960,114 direct and indirect (5/1/2020 – 4/30/2023).

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Research Experience for Undergraduates

Supplement to: Function and evolution of cognitive monitoring and cognitive control in monkeys, $15,552

(7/22/19).

NIH-funded Yerkes pilot project grant, Principal Investigator, Development and comparison of

technology for automated high-throughput cognitive phenotyping in large social groups of rhesus monkeys,

$101,5000 direct and indirect (5/1/18 – 4/30/19).

National Institutes of Health T-32 Training Grant, Co-PI with Patricia Bauer, Mechanisms of learning

across development and species, $1,170,690 direct and indirect (4/30/2018-4/29/2023).

Emory College Center for Faculty Development and Excellence, funding for field trip for urban

wildlife course (12/1/17).

Fulbright Regional Travel Program, funding for travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina to give talks and

conduct a workshop on hypothesis generation and writing (4/25/17).

National Science Foundation, Directorate for Education and Human Resources (EHR), Principal

Investigator, Supplement to: Evolution of social cognition and the neurocognitive bases of transitive

inference in monkeys, $34,715 direct and indirect (8/15/16). Provided graduate student stipend

support for Rachel Diamond.

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Function and evolution of cognitive monitoring

and cognitive control in monkeys, $646,519 direct and indirect (8/1/16 – 7/31/20).

Fulbright Scholar Program, 2016-17. Fulbright-Garcia Robles recipient for study in Mexico,

Neurocognitive bases of mental representation of ordered information; Facilitating professional progress of

international and diverse scientists with mentoring, $38,900.

Cattell Sabbatical Award, 2016-17. Studies of memory in wild birds at Western’s Advanced Facility for

Avian Research, $40,000. Declined to take above Fulbright fellowship instead.

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Supplement to: Evolution of social cognition and

the neurocognitive bases of transitive inference in monkeys, $22,939 direct and indirect (5/13/2015).

Emory University Research Committee, Principal Investigator, Wild cognition: Regulation of attention

in foraging birds, $29,996, direct 5/2/2015 - 5/1/2016)

National Institutes of Health T-32 Training Grant, Co-PI with Patricia Bauer, Mechanisms of learning

across development and species, $766,282 (5/1/2013 - 4/30/2018).

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Supplement to: Comparative neuropsychology

of episodic memory: Unmasking elements of hippocampal function, $22,554 direct and indirect (9/21/12).

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Evolution of social cognition and the

neurocognitive bases of transitive inference in monkeys, $800,000 direct and indirect (3/2012 – 2/2016).

Emory Undergraduate Matching Grant Program, $1,250 direct (1/2011 – 5/2011). These funds

supported undergraduate Ms. Gabriel Schroder’s work on metamemory in monkeys.

Page 3: POSITION ADDRESS

Robert R. Hampton, Ph.D. CURRICULU M V I TA E 7/10/2020 Page 3 of 29

FUNDING AWARDED (CONTINUED)

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Supplement to: Comparative neuropsychology

of episodic memory: Unmasking elements of hippocampal function, $11,000 direct and indirect (7/16/09).

National Institutes of Health RO1, Principal Investigator, Memory monitoring and declarative memory:

Behavior and brain. $1,980,000 direct and indirect (7/7/08 - 6/30/14).

Emory Undergraduate Matching Grant Program, $1,250 direct (9/2008 – 3/2009). These funds

helped support undergraduate Ms. Dina Chou’s work on the “Thatcher Effect” in monkeys.

National Science Foundation, Principal Investigator, Comparative neuropsychology of episodic memory:

Unmasking elements of hippocampal function, $560,000 direct and indirect (5/15/08 - 4/30/14).

James S. McDonnell Foundation, co-Principal Investigator (with Wendy Suzuki, NYU), An

Ethological Approach to Memory and Cognition in Monkeys, $450,000 direct only (9/1/06 - 8/31/09;

Funds split between NYU and Emory, extended through 8/31/10).

Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Venture Grant, co-investigator (Maria Alvarado (PI), with

Stephan Hamann, Jocelyne Bachevalier), Imaging medial temporal lobe activity related to memory and

emotion in awake, behaving monkeys, $30,000 direct (7/1/2006 – 10/30/2009).

Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Venture Grant, Principal Investigator (with Mark Wilson),

An Ethological Approach to Cognition in Monkeys: Inference of Social Rank, $42,772 direct (8/17/05 -

12/31/08).

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Short-Term Invitation Fellowship, April 2004. Funded

travel to and within Japan, and living expenses for 50 days of collaborative research on chimpanzee

cognition conducted at Kyoto University’s Primate Research Institute in Inuyama, Japan.

Supplementary Funds Award, National Institute of Mental Heath Intramural Research Program,

January 1999. This competitively awarded support provided funds to purchase monkeys, renovate

a large testing room, and hire a full-time research assistant for research on spatial memory and

episodic memory in monkeys.

Postdoctoral Intramural Research Training Award (IRTA), National Institute of Mental Health,

4/1996 – 11/2000.

Postdoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (NRSA), National Institute of Neuro-

logical Disorders and Stroke, July 1996. Accepted above (IRTA) award instead.

National Science Foundation Graduate Fellow, 1989–1992.

Graduate Degree Completion Award, University of Toronto Life Sciences Committee, July 1995.

University of Toronto Open Fellowships.

Simcoe Special Fellowships, University of Toronto.

University of Minnesota Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, National Science

Foundation, 1987.

Undergraduate Research Grant, Department of Psychology, Macalester College, 1987.

Dewitt Distinguished Scholar, Macalester College 1984–1988.

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PUBLICATIONS (GGRADUATE STUDENT; PPOSTDOC; UUNDERGRADUATE)

EMPIRICAL PAPERS

Hassett, T.C. & Hampton, R.R. (accepted). Monkeys manipulate mental images.

Brown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (in press). Cognitive control of working memory but not familiarity in

rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta), Learning & Behavior.

Basile, B.M., Templer, V.L., Paxton Gazes, R.P., & Hampton, R.R. (in press). The hippocampus does

not support visual memory or relational cognition in monkeys, Scientific Advances,

Lazareva, O.F., Gazes, R.P., Elkins, Z. & Hampton, R.R. (2020). Associative Models Fail to

Characterize Transitive Inference Performance in Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca Mulatta), Learning &

Behavior, DOI: 10.3758/s13420-020-00417-6

GBrady, R.J., Basile, B.M., Hampton, R.R. (2019). Hippocampal damage attenuates habituation to

videos in monkeys. Hippocampus, DOI: 10.1002/hipo.23155.

Gazes, R.P., Lutz, M.C., Meyer, M.J., Hassett, T.C., Hampton, R.R. (2019). Influences of demographic,

seasonal, and social factors on automated touchscreen computer use by rhesus monkeys (Macaca

mulatta) in a large naturalistic group, PLoS ONE, doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215060.

PMC6481812

Templer, V.T., Gazes, R.P. & Hampton (2019). Co-operation of long-term and working memory

representations in simultaneous chaining by rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Quarterly Journal of

Experimental Psychology, doi.org/10.1177/1747021819838432. PMC6693949

Brown, E.K., Basile, B.M., Templer, V.L. & Hampton, R.R. (2019). Dissociation of memory signals for

metamemory in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Animal Cognition, doi.org/10.1007/s10071-019-

01246-5. PMC6548541

GBrady, R.J. & Hampton, R.R. (2018). Nonverbal working memory for novel images in rhesus

monkeys. Current Biology, doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.10.025. PMC6501570

Templer, V.T., GBrown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (2018). Rhesus monkeys metacognitively monitor

memories of the order of events. Scientific Reports, 8. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30001-y.

PMC6070473

Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2018). Nonnavigational spatial memory performance is unaffected by

hippocampal damage in monkeys. Hippocampus, doi.org/10.1002/hipo.23013. PMC6474245

GBrady, R.J. & Hampton, R.R. (2018). Post-encoding control of working memory enhances processing

of relevant information in Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Cognition, 175, 26-35,

DOI.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2018.02.012. PMC5879026

Gazes, R.P., UChee, N.W. & Hampton, R.R. (2018). Monkeys choose, but do not learn, through

exclusion. Animal Behavior and Cognition, 5(1), 9-18. https://doi.org/10.26451/abc.05.01.02.2018.

In process NIHMSID 1036119

Gazes, R.P, GDiamond, R.F.L., UHope, J.M., Caillaud, D., Stoinski, T.S & Hampton, R.R. (2017).

Spatial representation of magnitude in gorillas and orangutans. Cognition, 168, 312-319 DOI:

10.1016/j.cognition.2017.07.010. Not NIH supported.

Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2017). Dissociation of item and source memory in rhesus monkeys.

Cognition, 166, 398–406. DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.06.009. PMC5549443

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EMPIRICAL PAPERS (CONTINUED)

GHassett, T.C. & Hampton, R.R. (2017). Change in the relative contributions of habit and working

memory facilitates serial reversal learning expertise in rhesus monkeys. Animal Cognition, 20, 485–

497. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-017-1076-8. PMC6413322

GBrown, E.K., Templer, V.L., Hampton, R.R. (2017). An assessment of domain-general metacognitive

responding in rhesus monkeys. Behavioral Processes, 135, 132–144. DOI:

0.1016/j.beproc.2016.12.004; PMC6404529

GDiamond, R. F. L., Stoinski, T. S., Mickelberg, J. L., Basile, B. M., Gazes, R. P., Templer. V.L., Hampton, R.

R. (2016). Similar stimulus features control visual classification in orangutans and rhesus monkeys.

Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 105, 100-110. DOI: 10.1002/jeab.176. PMC6413319

Gazes, R. P., Hampton, R.R. & Lourenco, S.F. (2016). Transitive Inference of Social Dominance by

Human Infants. Developmental Science. DOI: 10.1111/desc.12367. Not NIH supported.

PTu, H.W., UPani, A. & Hampton, R.R. (2015). Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca mulatta) Adaptively Adjust

Information Seeking in Response to Information Accumulated, Journal of Comparative Psychology,

129, 347-355. PMC4648642

GBasile, B.M., USchroeder, G.R., GBrown, E.K., GTempler, V.L, & Hampton, R.R. (2014). Evaluation of

seven hypotheses for metamemory performance in rhesus monkeys. Journal of Experimental

Psychology: General, 144, 85-102. PMC4308511

Gazes, R.P., Lazareva, O.F., UBergene, C.N. & Hampton, R.R. (2014). Effects of spatial training on

transitive inference performance in humans and rhesus monkeys. Journal of Experimental

Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition, 40, 477-489. PMC4370116

PTu, H.W., & Hampton, R.R. (2014). Control of working memory in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta).

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition, 40, 467-476. PMC4243171

GMøller-Andersen, L., PBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2014). Dissociation of visual localization and

visual detection in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Animal Cognition, 17, 681-687. PMC3988222

GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2013). Recognition errors suggest fast familiarity and slow

recollection in rhesus monkeys. Learning and Memory, 20, 431-437. PMC3718198

GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2013). Dissociation of active working memory and passive

recognition in rhesus monkeys. Cognition, 126, 391-396. PMC3558612

GGazes, R.P., Brown, E.K., GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2012). Automated cognitive testing of

monkeys in social groups yields results comparable to individual laboratory-based testing. Animal

Cognition, 16, 445-458. PMC3625694

GTempler, V.L., & Hampton, R.R. (2012). Cognitive mechanisms of memory for order in rhesus

monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Hippocampus, 23, 193-201. PMC3757570

GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2012). Monkeys show recognition without priming in a classification

task. Behavioural Processes, 93, 50-61. PMC3541476

PTu, H.W., & Hampton, R.R. (2012). One-trial Memory and Habit Contribute Independently to

Performance in Rhesus Monkeys. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 127, 319-328. PMC3909651

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EMPIRICAL PAPERS (CONTINUED)

GGazes, R.P., UChee, N., & Hampton, R.R. (2012). Cognitive mechanisms for transitive inference

performance in rhesus monkeys: Measuring the influence of associative strength and inferred order.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 38, 331-345. PMC3774320 (This

article won Dr. Gazes the APA Division of Experimental Psychology 2013 New Investigator Award in

Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes.)

GTempler, V.L., & Hampton, R.R. (2012). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) show robust evidence for

memory awareness across multiple generalization tests. Animal Cognition, 15, 409-419. PMC3335934

PTu, H.W, Hampton, R.R. & Murray, E.A. (2011). Perirhinal Cortex Removal Dissociates Two

Memory Systems in Matching-to-Sample Performance in Rhesus Monkeys. Journal of Neuroscience,

31, 16336-16343. PMC3241006

PAdachi, I., & Hampton, R.R. (2011). Rhesus monkeys see who they hear: spontaneous cross-modal

memory for familiar conspecifics. PLoS ONE, 6(8), e23345. PMC3160873

GBasile, B., & Hampton, R.R. (2011). Monkeys recall and reproduce simple shapes from memory.

Current Biology, 21, 774-778. PMC3090493

GPaxton, R., GBasile, B.M., PAdachi, I., Suzuki, W.A., Wilson, M., & Hampton, R.R. (2010). Rhesus

monkeys (Macaca mulatta) rapidly learn to select dominant individuals in videos of artificial social

interactions between unfamiliar conspecifics. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 124, 395-401.

PMC2991481

GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2010). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) show robust primacy and

recency in memory for lists from small, but not large, image sets. Behavioural Processes, 83, 183-190.

PMC2830856

PAdachi, I., UChou, D.P. & Hampton, R.R. (2009). Thatcher effect in monkeys demonstrates

conservation of face perception across primates. Current Biology, 19, 1270-1273. PMC2726903

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2009). Tests of planning and the Bischof-Köhler hypothesis in rhesus

monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Behavioural Processes, 80, 238-246. PMC2739929

GBasile, B.M., Hampton, R.R., Suomi, S., & Murray, E.A. (2009). An Assessment of Memory

Awareness in Tufted Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus apella). Animal Cognition, 12, 169-180. PMC2676690

GBasile, B.M., Hampton, R.R., Chaudhry, A.M., & Murray, E.A. (2007). Presence of a privacy divider

increases proximity in pair-housed rhesus monkeys. Animal Welfare, 16, 37-39.

Hampton, R.R. & Hampstead, B.M. (2006). Spontaneous behavior of a rhesus monkey (Macaca

mulatta) during memory tests suggests memory awareness. Behavioral Processes, 72, 184-189.

Heiss, J.D., Walbridge, S., Morrison, P., Hampton R.R., Sato, S., Vortmeyer, A., Butman, J.A.,

O'Malley, J., Vidwan, P., Dedrick, R.L., & Oldfield, E.H. (2005). Local distribution and toxicity of

prolonged hippocampal infusion of muscimol. Journal of Neurosurgery, 103, 1035-1045. PMC4294277

Hampton, R.R., Hampstead, B.M., & Murray, E.A. (2005). Rhesus monkeys demonstrate robust

memory for what and where, but not when, in an open-field test. Learning and Motivation, 36, 245-

259.

Hampton, R.R., Zivin, A., & Murray, E.A. (2004). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) discriminate

between knowing and not knowing and collect information as needed before acting. Animal

Cognition, 7, 239-254. PMID: 15105996

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EMPIRICAL PAPERS (CONTINUED)

Hampton, R.R., Hampstead, B.M., & Murray, E.A. (2004). Selective hippocampal damage impairs

spatial memory in an open-field test in rhesus monkeys. Hippocampus, 14, 808-818. PMID: 15382251

Hampton, R.R., Buckmaster, C.A., Anuszkiewicz-Lundgren, D., & Murray, E.A. (2004). Method for

making selective lesions of the hippocampus in macaque monkeys using NMDA and a longitudinal

surgical approach. Hippocampus, 14, 9-18. PMID: 15058478

Hampton, R.R. & Murray, E.A. (2002). Learning of discriminations is impaired, but generalization to

altered views is intact, in monkeys (Macaca mulatta) with perirhinal cortex removal. Behavioral

Neuroscience, 116, 363-377. PMID: 12049317

Hampton, R.R. (2001). Rhesus monkeys know when they remember. Proceedings of the National

Academy of Sciences, USA, 98, 5359-5362. PMCID: PMC33214

Hampton, R.R., Shettleworth, S.J., & Westwood, R. (1998). Proactive interference, recency, and

associative strength: Comparisons of black-capped chickadees and dark-eyed juncos. Animal

Learning & Behavior, 26, 475–485.

Brodbeck, D.R., Hampton, R.R., & Cheng, K. (1998). Timing behavior of black-capped chickadees.

Behavioural Processes, 44, 183–195. PMID: 24896974

Mrosovsky, N. & Hampton, R.R. (1997). Spatial responses to light in mice with severe retinal

degeneration. Neuroscience Letters, 222, 204–206. PMID: 9148250

Hampton, R.R. & Shettleworth, S.J. (1996). Hippocampus and memory in a food-storing and in a

non-storing bird species. Behavioral Neuroscience, 110, 946–964. PMID: 8918998

Hampton, R.R. & Shettleworth, S.J. (1996). Hippocampal lesions impair memory for location but not

color in passerine birds. Behavioral Neuroscience, 110, 831–835 PMID: 8864273.

Hampton, R.R., Sherry, D.F., Shettleworth, S., Khurgel, M. & Ivy, G. (1995). Hippocampal volume

and food-storing behavior are related in parids. Brain, Behavior, and Evolution, 45, 54–61. PMID:

7866771

Krebs, J.R., Clayton, N.S., Hampton, R.R., & Shettleworth, S.J. (1995). Effects of photoperiod on food-

storing and the hippocampus in birds. Neuroreport, 6, 1701–1704. PMID: 8527745

Shettleworth, S.J., Hampton, R.R., & Westwood, R. (1995). The effects of season and photoperiod on

food-storing in black-capped chickadees. Animal Behaviour, 49, 989–998.

Hampton, R.R. (1994). Sensitivity to information specifying the line of gaze of humans by sparrows

(Passer domesticus). Behaviour, 103, 41–51.

Hampton, R.R. & Sherry, D.F. (1992). The effects of cache loss on choice of cache site in black-capped

chickadees. Behavioral Ecology, 5, 45–50.

Hampton, R.R. & Sherry, D.F. (1992). Food storing by mexican chickadees and bridled titmice.

The Auk, 109, 665–666.

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REVIEWS AND COMMENTARIES

Hampton, R.R., GEngelberg, J.W.M. & GBrady, R.J. (2020). Explicit memory and cognition in

monkeys. Neuropsychologia, doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.107326

Hampton, R.R. (2019). Monkey metacognition could generate more insight. Animal Behavior and

Cognition, 6(4), 230-235. https://doi.org/10.26451.abc.06.04.02.2019

Hampton, R.R. (2018). Parallel overinterpretation of behavior of apes and corvids. Learning & Behavior.

doi.org/10.3758/s13420-018-0330-5. PMC6435430

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2014) Metacognition as discrimination: Commentary on Smith et al.

(2013). Journal of Comparative Psychology, 128, 135-137. PMC4374550

GTempler, V.L. & Hampton, R.R. (2013). Episodic memory in nonhuman animals. Current Biology,

23 (17). PMC3799964.

Hampton, R.R. (2009). Multiple demonstrations of metacognition in nonhumans: Converging

evidence or multiple mechanisms? Comparative Cognition & Behavior Reviews, 4, 17-28. Retrieved

from http://psyc.queensu.ca/ccbr/index.html. PMC2748335

Hampton, R.R. (2009). Focusing the uncertainty about metacognition in nonhumans. Comparative

Cognition & Behavior Reviews, 4, 56-7. Retrieved from http://psyc.queensu.ca/ccbr/index.html.

PMC2748339

Hampton, R.R. (2005). Monkey perirhinal cortex is critical for visual memory, but not for visual

perception: re-examination of the behavioral evidence from monkeys. Quarterly Journal of

Experimental Psychology, 58B, 283-299.

Hampton, R.R. & Schwartz, B.L. (2004). Episodic memory in nonhumans: What, and where, is when?

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 14, 192-197. PMID: 15082324

Hampton, R.R. (2003). Metacognition as evidence for explicit representation in nonhumans.

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 26, 346-347.

Hampton, R.R., Healy, S.D., Shettleworth, S.J., & Kamil, A.C. (2002). Neuroecologists are not made of

straw. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 6, 6-7. PMID: 11849608

Murray, E.A., Bussey, T.J., Hampton, R.R., & Saksida, L.M. (2000). The parahippocampal region and

object identification. In H. E. Scharfman, M. P. Witter & R. Schwarcz (Eds.), The Parahippocampal

Region: Implications for Neurological and Psychiatric Diseases (pp. 166-174). Annals of the New

York Academy of Sciences, 911. PMID: 10911873

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Book Chapters

Hampton, R.R. (2011). Status of nonhuman memory monitoring and possible roles in planning and

decision making. In: Menzel, R., and J. Fischer (Eds.), Animal Thinking: Contemporary Issues in

Comparative Cognition. Strüngmann Forum Report, vol. 8. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Clayton, N., Carruthers, P., Dickinson, A., Glimcher, P.W., Güntürkün, O., Hampton, R.R., Kacelnik,

A., Shanahan, M., Stevens, J.R., & Tebbich, S. (2011). Planning, Memory, and Decision Making. In:

Menzel, R., and J. Fischer (Eds.), Animal Thinking: Contemporary Issues in Comparative Cognition.

Strüngmann Forum Report, vol. 8. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Hampton, R.R. (2006). Memory awareness in rhesus monkeys. In: Kazuo Fujita and Shoji Itakura

(Eds.), Diversity of Cognition (pp. 282-299). Kyoto, Japan: Kyoto University Press.

Hampton, R.R. (2005). Can monkeys discriminate between remembering and forgetting? In Janet

Metcalfe and Herbert Terrace (Eds.), The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Knowing

Consciousness (pp. 272-295). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Shettleworth, S.J. & Hampton, R.R. (1998). Adaptive specializations of spatial cognition in food

storing birds? Approaches to testing a comparative hypothesis. In I. Pepperberg, A.C. Kamil, & R.P.

Balda (Eds.), Animal Cognition in the Field. Academic press.

OTHER

Basile, B.M., GBrown, E.K. & Hampton R.R. (2018). Self-Awareness. In Vonk, J. & Shackelford, T.K.

(eds) Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior,

https://link.springer.com/referencework/10.1007/978-3-319-47829-6

Hampton, R.R. (2010). Metacognition and metamemory in non-human animals. In Breed M.D. &

Moore J. (eds) Encyclopedia of Animal Behaviour, pp. 443-448 Oxford: Academic Press.

Hampton, R.R. (2001). Animal minds: Beyond cognition to consciousness [Review of the book Animal

Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness]. Ethology, 11, 1055-1056.

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MEETINGS ORGANIZED

Environmental and Developmental Potentiators of Learning. March, 2019, Emory University.

Computations and Cognition in Learning and Memory. April, 2018, Emory University.

Emory-UNAM Foro Binacional Mecanismos de Aprendizaje. May, 2017, Universidad Autonoma de

Mexico, Campus Juriquilla.

Making and Manipulating Memories. April, 2016, Emory University.

Social Modulation: Brain & Behavior. April, 2015, Emory University.

Spatial Representations and Representational Spaces. March, 2014, Emory University.

SYMPOSIA ORGANIZED

Meaning of Memory Systems in Comparative Cognition. April, 2019, Meeting of the International

Society for Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL. Invited speakers: Ryan Brady, Emily Brown,

Caroline Strange, David Smith, Brooke Jackson, Victoria Templer, Taylor Wise, Danielle Panoz-

Brown.

Mental Representation of Ordered Stimuli. February, 2014, 106th Meeting of the Southern Society for

Philosophy and Psychology, Charleston, SC. Invited speakers: Reggie Paxton Gazes, Ikuma Adachi,

Victoria Templer, Olga Lazareva

What is working memory in nonhuman animals? September, 2012, 16th Biennial Meeting of the

International Society for Comparative Psychology, Jaen, Spain. Invited speakers: Susan Healy,

Thomas Zentall, Benjamin Basile

Emory Psychology Department Research Festival, August 2011, Atlanta, GA

Comparative Perspectives on Memory, Meeting of the Southern Society for Philosophy and

Psychology, Savannah, GA. Invited speakers: James Nairne, David Sherry, Robyn Fivush, Hsiao-Wei

Tu, Jeff Katz.

INVITED SYMPOSIUM PRESENTATIONS Hampton, R.R. (2019, November). Studies of metacognition and dissociations in memory in monkeys suggest

explicit cognition. 60th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Hampton, R.R. (2018, October). Sophisticated abstract cognition, but weak social cognition, in rhesus

macaque monkeys. Meeting in recognition of the 25th anniversary of the Instituto de Neuroetología, Xalapa,

Veracruz, Mexico.

Hampton, R.R. (2017, October). Learning from apes and other nonhuman animals. Meeting in honor of Duane

Rumbaugh and Lana, GSU, Atlanta, GA

Hampton, R.R. (2016, May). The roots of human metacognition. International meeting of the Psychonomic

Society, Granada, Spain.

Hampton, R.R. (2014, July). Frontiers in Comparative Cognitive Science - In Search of the Origins of Mind,

Innuyama, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2014, March). Cognition, Enrichment, and Collaboration, Zoo Atlanta, USA.

Hampton, R.R. (2013, October). Fondation Delwart: Emergence of Consciousness, Brussels, Belgium.

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INVITED SYMPOSIUM PRESENTATIONS (CONTINUED) Hampton, R.R. (2012, January). National Institute for Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India.

Hampton, R.R. (2011, September). Emory Cognition Project, Atlanta, USA.

Hampton, R.R. (2011, June). Association for Scientific Study of Consciousness (ASSC), Kyoto, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2011, June). Satellite meeting of the ASSC, Kyoto, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2010, November). Evolution of Cognition, Ann Arbor, USA.

Hampton, R.R. (2010, January). Knowledge, Language, and Memory, Gottingen, Germany.

Hampton, R.R. (2009, August). American Psychological Association, Toronto, Canada.

Hampton, R.R. (2009, March). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (2008, October). International Society for Comparative Psychology, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Hampton, R.R. (2008, June). European Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Utrecht, Netherlands.

Hampton, R.R. (2008, March). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (2008, February). Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior, Winter Park, CO.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, November). Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society, Minneapolis, MN.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, March). Experimental Psychology Society, Oxford, UK.

Hampton, R.R. (2003, September). Diversity of Cognition: Evolution, Development, Domestication and

Pathology, Kyoto, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2003, January). 27th Annual Winter Conference on the Neurobiology of Learning and

Memory, Park City, UT.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, August). Royal Society of Edinburgh meeting on Basic and Clinical Aspects of

Memory Function, Edinburgh, Scotland.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, April). The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Knowing Consciousness,

Columbia University, New York, NY.

WORKSHOPS AND OTHER FORMATS Hampton, R.R. (2016, December). Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Azrieli Program on

Brain, Mind, and Consciousness. Seattle, USA.

Hampton, R.R. (2017, January). Fulbright mid-term reunion. Tlaxcala, Mexico.

Hampton, R.R. (2016, April). Toronto Metacognition Workshop. Toronto, Canada.

Hampton, R.R. (2010, September). Strüngmann Forum. Animal Thinking: Contemporary Issues in

Comparative Cognition. Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, Frankfurt, Germany.

COLLOQUIA AND INVITED TALKS

Hampton, R.R. (2019, September). University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.

Hampton, R.R. (2019, September). Indianapolis Zoo, Indianapolis, IN.

Hampton, R.R. (2019, June). University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.

Hampton, R.R. (2019, March). Grinnell College, Grinnell, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (2017, June). Universidad Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico.

Hampton, R.R. (2017, May). University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

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COLLOQUIA AND INVITED TALKS (CONTINUED)

Hampton, R.R. (2017, May). University of Quilmes, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Hampton, R.R. (2017, January). Instituto de Neurobiología, Cortex club, Querétaro, Mexico.

Hampton, R.R. (2015, January). University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.

Hampton, R.R. (2014, November). Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (2014, October). Hard Data Café Seminar Series, Cognitive Sciences Program of the GSU

Psychology Department, Atlanta, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2014, October). Brains and Behavior Seminar, Toronto, Ontario.

Hampton, R.R. (2011, October). Georgia State University undergraduate research conference keynote speaker,

Atlanta, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2011, February). Drake University, Des Moines, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (2010, November). University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, PA.

Hampton, R.R. (2010, October). Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany.

Hampton, R.R. (2008, September). Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, IA

Hampton, R.R. (2006, April). Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (2005, February). University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, November). Macalester College, St. Paul, MN.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, August). RIKEN Brain Research Institute, Wako, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, August). Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, April). Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, February). University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, February). Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.

Hampton, R.R. (2004, February). Emory University, Atlanta, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2003, December). Instituto de Neurobiología UNAM, Querétaro, Mexico.

Hampton, R.R. (2003, September). Primate Research Institute, Inuyama, Japan.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, November). Emory University, Atlanta, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, October). University of South Dakota School of Medicine, Vermillion, SD.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, September). Columbia University’s Seminar on Behavioral and Cognitive

Neuroscience, New York, NY.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, July). Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center, Atlanta, GA.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, April). University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN.

Hampton, R.R. (2000, December). University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.

Hampton, R.R. (2000, March). SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY.

Hampton, R.R. (1999, June). University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, LA.

Hampton, R.R. (1999, April). Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (1998, October). University of Maryland, College Park, MD.

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Hampton, R.R. (1997, September). Macalester College, St. Paul, MN.

Hampton, R.R. (1995, September). National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD.

Hampton, R.R. (1995, April). The Rockefeller University, Millbrook, NY.

Hampton, R.R. (1994, December). Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, IA.

Hampton, R.R. (1994, November). Ebbinghaus Empire, University of Toronto cognition seminar series,

Toronto, Ontario.

Hampton, R.R., Shettleworth, S.J. (1994, October). Cold Spring Harbor Conference on Learning and Memory,

Cold Spring Harbor, NY.

Hampton, R.R. (1994, October). University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.

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ORAL CONFERENCE CONTRIBUTIONS Hampton, R.R. (April, 2019). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL

Brown, E.K., Sherry, D.F. & Hampton, R.R. (Deliverd by RRH, 2018, April). International Conference on

Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL

Hampton, R.R. (2016, April). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL

Hampton, R.R. (2014, March). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL

Hampton, R.R. (2013, March). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R., GBasile, B.M., GBrown, E.K.., & PTu, H.W. (2013, February). 105th Annual Meeting of the

Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Austin, TX.

Hampton, R.R. (2012, October). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, New Orleans, LA.

Hampton, R.R. (2007, November). Psychonomics Society, Long Beach, CA.

Hampton, R.R. & Hampstead, B.M. (2005, March). Comparative Cognition Society, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. & Zivin, A. (2003, March). Comparative Cognition Society, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, November). 22nd Annual Meeting of the J.B. Johnston Club, Orlando, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (2002, March). Comparative Cognition Society, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (2001, March). Comparative Cognition Society, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R. & Murray, E.A. (2000, November). 30th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience,

New Orleans, LA.

Hampton, R.R. (2000, November). 20th Annual Meeting of the J.B. Johnston Club, New Orleans, LA.

Hampton, R.R. & Murray E.A. (1999, October). 29th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Miami, FL.

Hampton, R.R. (1999, September). Third Annual NIMH Fellows Retreat, Warrenton, VA.

Hampton, R.R. (1999, June). Third Annual Meeting of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness,

University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.

POSTER PRESENTATIONS (GGRADUATE STUDENT; PPOSTDOC; UUNDERGRADUATE)

Hassett, T.C. , Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2018, April). Dissociation of Explicit and Implicit Memory in Rhesus

Monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBrown, E.K., Sherry, D.F. & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). Automated memory testing of winter flocks of birds in

semi-natural conditions. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBrady, R.J. & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Lutz, M., Gazes, R.P., Meyer, M.J., GHassett, T.C. & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). The effect of rank on use of

automated touchscreen testing systems by socially-housed rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). International

Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Lazareva, O, Kandray, K., Bergene, C., Gazes, R.P. & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). Does list linking design pose a

special challenge to reinforcement-based models of TI? International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

Gazes, R.P, GDiamond, R.F.L., UHope, J.M., Caillaud, D., Stoinski, T.S & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). Spatial

representation of magnitude in gorillas and orangutans. International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS (CONTINUED)

GBrady, R.J., & Hampton, R.R. (2017, April). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) reallocate working memory re-

sources to prioritize the maintenance of relevant information. Southeastern Primate Evolution and Behavior Con-

ference, Atlanta, GA. Southeastern Primate Evolution and Behavior Conference Best Poster Award

GBrady, R.J. & Hampton, R.R. (2016, April). Rhesus monkeys selectively shift attention within working memory to

prioritize relevant information. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GHassett, T.C. & Hampton, R.R. (2016, April). Measuring the effects of chronic social stress on cognitive control in

group-housed rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

GDiamond, R.F., Hampton, R.R. & Adachi, I. (2016, April). An interference test of the spatial representation of order

in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GDiamond, R. F. L., Gazes, R. P., Hampton, R. R. 2015. Monkeys (Macaca mulatta) represent magnitude with flexible

spatial mappings. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL.

GBrown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (2015, April). Monkeys use similar discriminative cues across two tests of

metamemory. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Adachi, I & Hampton, R.R. (2015, April). Space-based representation of an acquired sequence in rhesus macaques.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GDiamond, R.F. & Hampton, R.R. (2015, April). Flexible spatial representation of magnitude in monkeys.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GHassett, T. & Hampton, R.R. (2015, April). Change in the relative contribution of habit and working memory

facilitate serial reversal learning expertise in rhesus macaques. International Conference on Comparative

Cognition, Melbourne, FL

Templer, V.L., Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2015, April). Concurrent cognitive demand impairs memory for order

more than memory for items in rhesus monkeys. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne,

FL.

Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2014, November). Hippocampal lesions do not affect measures of recollection and

familiarity in rhesus monkeys. Society for Neuroscience, Washington, D.C.

GBrown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (2014, November). Monkeys use similar discriminative cues across two tests of

metamemory. Society for Neuroscience, Washington, D.C.

GBrown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (2014, March). Developing tests of cognitive control in rhesus monkeys.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GDiamond, R.F., Gazes, R.P. & Hampton, R.R. (2014, March). Representation of magnitude in rhesus monkeys

(Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GTempler, V.L. & Hampton, R.R. (2013, March). Cognitive mechanisms for sequence learning in monkeys.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

UBergene, C., Gazes, R.P., Hampton, R.R., & Lazareva O.F. (2013, March). Using reinforcement based models of

transitive inference to simulate primate data. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2013, March). Source memory and source confusion in rhesus monkeys.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Gazes, R.P., GDiamond, R.F.L. Hampton, R.R., Stoinski, T.S. 2013. Magnitude processing by apes (Pongo pygmaeus, P.

abelii, Gorilla gorilla gorilla) and monkeys (Macaca mulatta). 54th annual meeting of the Psychonomic Society.

Toronto, Canada.

GBrown, E.K. & Hampton, R.R. (2013, March). Comparison of prospective and concurrent metamemory judgments

in Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS (CONTINUED)

GTempler, V.L., Hampton, R.R. (2012, August). Memory for order in monkeys. American Psychological Association

Convention, Orlando, FL.

PTu, H.W. & Hampton, R. R. (2012, August). Active control of memory in rhesus monkeys. American Psychological

Association Convention, Orlando, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, August). Evidence for the dual processes of recollection and familiarity in

monkey memory. American Psychological Association Convention, Orlando, FL.

GGazes, R.P. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, August). Choices on transitive inference tasks are controlled primarily by

ordered representations, not associative values, in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). American Psychological

Association Convention, Orlando, FL.

USchroeder, G.R, GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). Rhesus monkeys selectively seek information when

ignorant in a computerized foraging task. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

PTu, H.W. & Hampton, R. R. (2012, March). Demonstration of the independence of one-trial memory and habit using

process dissociation procedure in rhesus monkeys. International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). Holding familiar information in working memory is cognitively

effortful for monkeys. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GTempler, V.L. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). What is when in monkeys? International Conference on

Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). Contributions of associative value and spatial representations to transi-

tive inference performance in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cogni-

tion, Melbourne, FL.

GPaxton, R., Brown, E.K., GBasile, B.M., & Hampton, R.R. (2011, July). Automated cognitive test performance by

monkeys in laboratory and large semi-natural social groups. Behaviour 2011, Bloomington, IN.

PTu, H.W. & Hampton, R. R. (2011, March). Cooperation and interference of event memory and habit in rhesus

monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GTempler, V.L. & Hampton, R. R. (2011, March). Memory for sequences of events in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mu-

latta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R. R. (2011, March). What cognitive mechanisms underlie transitive inference performance

in monkeys? International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R. R. (2011, March). Recollection and familiarity in monkey memory: Evidence from a

direct comparison of recall with recognition and an analysis of recognition errors. International Conference on

Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GTempler, V.L. & Hampton, R. R. (2010, March). Memory monitoring in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta).

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2010, March). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) demonstrate the cognitive capacities

necessary for learning dominance hierarchies by transitive inference. International Conference on Comparative

Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B. M. & Hampton, R.R. (2010, March). Monkeys show recognition, but not priming, in a categorization task.

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne Beach, FL.

GBasile, B. M. & Hampton, R.R. (2009, October). Comparison of visual recall and visual recognition tests in rhesus

monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Society for Neuroscience, Chicago, IL.

GTempler, V. L. & Hampton, R.R. (2009, October). Memory monitoring in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Society

for Neuroscience, Chicago, IL.

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS (CONTINUED) GBasile, B. M. & Hampton, R. R. (2009, June). Performance of rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) in tests of recall

and recognition parallels human memory. The Primate Mind, Erice, Italy. GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2009, June). Tests of future planning in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta).

The Primate Mind, Erice, Italy.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R. R. (2009, March). Choice by mutual exclusivity in rhesus macaques (Macaca

mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M., UOrtiz, M.R., & Hampton, R.R. (2009, March). Effects of image set size and practice on the serial

position curve in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

PAdachi, I. & Hampton, R.R. (2008, March). Cross-modal representations of familiar conspecifics in rhesus

monkeys. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2008, March). Development of a recall memory test for rhesus monkeys

(Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2008, March). Tests of the Bischof-Kohler Hypothesis in Rhesus Monkeys

(Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R., Manzanares, C. & Zola, S. (2007, November). Perceptual and mnemonic competence in

monkeys with damage to perirhinal cortex and other temporal lobe structures. Society for Neuroscience, San

Diego, CA.

PAdachi, I. & Hampton, R.R. (2007, March). Individual recognition of conspecifics in videos by rhesus

macaques (Macaca mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

PAdachi, I., Suzuki, W.A., GBasile, B.M., GPaxton, R., & Hampton, R.R. (2007, March). Assessment of social

dominance concept formation using videos of artificial social interactions in rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca

mulatta). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton, R.R., Manzanares, C., & Zola, S. (2006, October). Direct assessment of perceptual competence in

monkeys with damage to perirhinal cortex by manipulation of “feature ambiguity.” Society for Neuroscience,

Atlanta, GA.

PAdachi, I. & Hampton, R.R. (2006, October). Assessment of mnemonic processes underlying individual

recognition in rhesus macaque monkeys. Society for Neuroscience, Atlanta, GA.

GBasile, B.M., Hampton, R.R., Suomi, S.J., & Murray, E.A. (2006, March). Assessment of Memory Awareness in

Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus apella). International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Basile, B.M., Hampton, R.R., Suomi, S.J., and Murray, E.A. (2005, May). Do Capuchin Monkeys Monitor their

Memory? 6th Annual Postbaccalaureate Poster Day, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.

Basile, B.M., Hampton, R.R., Chaudhry, A.M. & Murray, E.A. (2004, May). Increasing social behavior in pair-

housed rhesus monkeys through use of a privacy divider. NIH Postbaccalaureate Poster Day, Bethesda, MD.

Hampton, R.R. & Murray, E.A. (2004, March). Dissociation of Memory Systems by Perirhinal Cortex Removal

in Rhesus Monkeys Using a Process Dissociation Procedure. International Conference on Comparative

Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Hampton R.R. and Murray E.A. (2003, November). Dissociation of Recognition Memory and Habit by

Perirhinal Cortex Removal in Rhesus Monkeys Using a Process Dissociation Procedure. Society for

Neuroscience, New Orleans, LA.

Heiss, J., Walbridge, S., Hampton, R.R., Sato, S., Vortmeyer, A., Morrison, P., Butman, J.,Oldfield, E.H. (2002,

September). Prolonged perfusion of the primate hippocampus with muscimol. Congress of Neurological

Surgeons, Neurosurgery, 51, 588.

Hampton, R.R., Hampstead, B.M., & Murray, E.A. (2001, November). Rhesus monkeys with selective lesions of

the hippocampus are impaired in an episodic-like memory task. Society for Neuroscience, San Diego, CA.

Hampstead, B.M., Hampton, R.R. & Murray, E.A. (2001, November). Selective hippocampal damage impairs

spatial memory in an open-field test in rhesus monkeys. Society for Neuroscience, San Diego, CA.

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS (CONTINUED)

Hampton, R.R., Hampstead, B.M., & Murray, E.A. (September, 2000). Selective hippocampal damage impairs

spatial memory in an open-field test in monkeys. NIMH/NINDS Scientific Retreat, Warrenton, VA.

Hampton, R.R. (1998, October). One Test for Explicit Memory in Rhesus Macaques. Human Cognitive

Specializations, Developmental and Comparative Perspectives, Lafayette, LA.

Hampton, R.R., & Murray, E.A. (1998, September). Changes in Object Representations Following Perirhinal Cortex

Lesions in Monkeys. NIMH Scientific Retreat, Warrenton, VA.

Hampton, R.R. & Shettleworth, S. (1995, September). Spatial Memory, Hippocampal Volume, and Food-Storing

in Black-Capped Chickadees and Dark-Eyed Juncos. International Congress of Neuroethology, Cambridge,

UK.

Shettleworth, S., Hampton, R.R., & Westwood, R. (1995, September). Hippocampus and Memory for Places and

Colors in a Food-Storing and a Non-Storing Bird Species. International Congress of Neuroethology,

Cambridge, UK.

Hampton, R.R. (1992, June). A Comparison of Caching Intensity in Three Species of Paridae, Animal Behavior

Society Annual Meeting, Kingston, Ontario.

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SPOKEN PRESENTATIONS CO-AUTHORED (GGRADUATE STUDENT; PPOSTDOC; UUNDERGRADUATE)

GBrady, R.J., Basile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2018, April). Hippocampal removal attenuates

habituation to videos in monkeys. International Conference on Comparative Cognition,

Melbourne, FL.

GBrown, E.K. and Hampton, R.R. (2016, April). Automated cognitive testing in free-ranging wild

birds. International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

Gazes, R.P., GDiamond, R., Hampton, R.R., Stoinski, T.S. (2014, February). Space and magnitude in

nonhuman primates. Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Charleston, SC.

Lazareva, O.F., Gazes, R.P., & Hampton, R.R. (2013, March). Does spatial arrangement of the training

stimuli enhance nonverbal transitive inference? International Conference on Comparative

Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2013, February). To define metacognition, identify the stimulus: A

case study of monkey metamemory. Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Austin, TX.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, September). Holding familiar information in working memory

is cognitively effortful for monkeys. 2nd joint meeting of the International Society for Comparative

Psychology and the Spanish Society for Comparative Psychology, Jaén, Spain.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). Holding familiar information in working memory is

cognitively effortful for monkeys. Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Savannah, GA.

GPaxton, R., Hampton, R.R. (2012, March). Cognitive mechanisms underlying transitive inference

performance in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Southern Society for Philosophy and

Psychology, Savannah, GA.

PTu, H.W., (2012, March). Dissociation of automatic and controlled memory in rhesus monkeys and

humans. Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Savannah, GA.

PAdachi, I. & Hampton, R.R. (2010, May). Auditory & visual individual recognition in rhesus

macaques (Macaca mulatta). International Society for Comparative Psychology, Awaji Island, Japan.

GBasile, B.M. & Hampton, R.R. (2010, April). Comparing monkey memory to human memory.

Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Atlanta, GA.

GPaxton, R. & Hampton, R.R. (2010, April). Memory in the service of social cognition. Southern

Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Atlanta, GA.

PAdachi, I., UChou, D., & Hampton, R.R. (2008, March). Thatcher effect demonstrates configural

processing of upright faces by rhesus monkeys. International Conference on Comparative

Cognition, Melbourne, FL.

PAdachi, I. & Hampton R.R. (2007, October). Japanese Society for Animal Psychology, Tokyo, Japan.

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TEACHING, UNDERGRADUATE Psyc 110: Introductory Psychology I: Psychobiology and Cognition (large undergraduate class)

taught fall 2005; fall 2006; fall 2007; fall 2009; fall 2011; fall 2013; fall 2014; spring 2019; fall 2020

Psych 385: Coyotes, Raccoons, & Opossums: Behavior, Evolution, Cognition & Co-Existence,

taught fall 2015; spring 2018

Psychology Study Abroad in the UK: summer 2012

Comparative Primate Cognition (undergraduate seminar), spring 2005

TEACHING, GRADUATE Psyc 770: Comparative Memory and Cognition (spring 2020, with Stephan Hamann)

Mechanisms of Learning graduate seminar, fall 2016; spring 2017 taught under my Fulbright Garcia

Robles fellowship at the Instituto de Neurobiología, UNAM, Querétaro, Mexico.

Psyc 730: Proseminar in Learning: Graduate seminar related to T-32 training grant taught fall 2013;

spring 2014; fall 2014; spring 2015; fall 2015; spring 2016; fall 2017; spring 2018; fall 2018; spring 2019;

History of Modern Psychology: (required graduate course) spring 2010

Psyc 770: Comparative Cognition (graduate seminar), spring 2007; spring 2009; spring 2011.

Psyc 553, NAB Proseminar IV: Comparative Perception, Cognition, and Neural Plasticity

(graduate core course), spring 2006; spring 2008; spring 2013; spring 2015; fall 2017

Organizer Center for Behavioral Neuroscience summer course on programming automated

cognitive experiments in Presentation©, summer 2007

Psyc 775R Neuroscience & Animal Behavior Seminar (775R), leader 2004-2005; 2011-2012; 2015-2016

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GRADUATE AND POST-DOCTORAL STUDENT MENTORING Rael Sammeroff, graduate student, (fall 2020 – present)

Jad Nasrini, graduate student (fall 2019 – present)

Jessica Dugan, graduate student with Patricia Bauer (fall 2015 – present)

Jonathan Engelberg, graduate student with Harold Gouzoules (summer 2018 – present)

Ryan Brady, graduate student (fall 2014 – summer 2020)

Thomas Hassett, graduate student (fall 2013 – spring 2019)

Gema Martin-Ordas, visiting postdoctoral fellow (October, 2012 – January 2013)

Rachel Diamond, graduate student (fall 2012 – spring 2017), now Assistant Director, Undergraduate

Research Programs, Emory University.

Emily Brown, graduate student (fall 2012 – fall 2018)

Lau Moller Andersen, visiting graduate student (fall 2010 – spring 2011)

Vicky Hsiao-Wei Tu, postdoctoral fellow, (summer 2010 – summer 2012). Now Behavior Scientist,

Nestle Purina.

Victoria Templer, graduate student (fall 2008 – spring 2014); now Assistant Professor, Providence

College.

Ben Basile, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow (spring 2013); graduate student (fall 2005 – spring 2013);

Postdoc, National Institute of Mental Health (fall, 2013 - present ); 2018 Early Career Award –

American Psychological Association, Division 3 and Comparative Cognition Society

Regina Paxton Gazes, Ph.D. graduate student (fall 2005 – March 2012); now Assistant Professor,

Bucknell University; Collaborated as Postdoc, Zoo Atlanta (2012-2014). Part of Dr. Gazes thesis won

the APA Division of Experimental Psychology 2013 New Investigator Award in Experimental

Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes.

Ikuma Adachi, Ph.D. postdoctoral fellow (spring 2006 – spring 2008); now Assistant Professor at the

Primate Research Institute in Inuyama, Japan. Dr. Adachi has continued to collaborate with the lab

and has made several many month-long visits to work with us.

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UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT MENTORING

Hayley Roesler, undergraduate volunteer, (fall 2019 - ) Jessica Winer, undergraduate volunteer, (fall 2019 - )

Jessica Maaskant, undergraduate volunteer, (fall 2019 - ) Nora Hundermark, undergraduate volunteer, (summer 2019 - )

Wenying Zhu, undergraduate volunteer; computational neuroscience undergraduate fellow, honors thesis; (spring 2017 – spring 2019); graduated with highest honors, now graduate student at CalTech

Kamin Bouguyon, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2016); NBB honors student (fall 2016 – spring 2017)

Tarun Swaminathan, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2016) Victoria Lord, Emory College Undergraduate Research in Neural and Behavioral Mechanisms of

Learning Award mentee (primary mentor, Emily Brown; fall 2015 – spring 2016); Volunteer fall 2016-spring 2017; Honors thesis student fall 2017 – 18 (graduated with Highest Honors)

Lisa Ahn, undergraduate volunteer, directed studies (fall 2015 – spring 2016) Zoe Fowler, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2015 – spring 2016)

Jasmine Hope, NET/work fellow (summer 2014 – spring 2015); NBB honors thesis; research specialist Yerkes Primate Center; now graduate student Emory University Neuroscience Program

Celia Greenlaw, undergraduate volunteer, honors thesis student (spring 2014 – spring 2016). Graduated with highest honors; now in medical school at Boston University.

Akshay Kohli, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2013 – spring 2015) now graduate student, University of Wisconsin.

Rebecca Cross, NET/work fellow (fall 2013 – spring 2014) Sarah Berman, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2012 – spring 2013; part-time employee summer 2013 –

fall 2014) Chris Hill, undergraduate volunteer and paid intern (fall 2011 – spring 2012); SIRE student (fall 2012

– spring 2013). Now a Software Engineer at Raytheon Company's Intelligence, Information and Services Division in Aurora, CO.

Alex Pani, undergraduate volunteer and paid intern (fall 2011 – spring 2013)

Thomas Hassett, summer SURE intern (summer 2011), now graduate student, Emory University. Lawrence Belanovsky, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2011)

Gabriel Schroeder, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2010; paid intern spring 2011- spring 2012; SURE student summer 2012); NBB honors student (fall 2012 – spring 2013); Second author on a poster presented at the International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL; now

medical student Andrea Bozja, undergraduate volunteer (summer 2010)

Janine Cabrera, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2010 – summer 2010); SIRE student (fall 2010 – spring 2011); Harvard school of educational policy and management; Administrative Fellow Harvard University (2015-16); now Training and Communications Specialist Emory University (2016 - )

Sam Taveras, SIRE student (fall 2009 – spring 2010)

Steven Sherrin, undergraduate volunteer (fall 2009 – fall 2010; now graduate student at University of Indiana)

Spencer Gobbel, CBN BRAIN program intern (summer 2009).

Nicholas Chee, SIRE student (fall 2008 – spring 2009); SURE student (summer 2009; 2nd place of 83

posters presented) Second author on a poster presented at the International Conference on

Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL; mentored research (fall 2009 – spring 2010 ); NBB Honors Thesis received highest honors (fall 2010 – spring 2011).

Christopher Clark, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2008 – fall 2009)

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UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT MENTORING (CONTINUED)

Michael Ortiz, SIRE student (fall 2007 – spring 2008). Second author on a poster presented at the

International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL. Dina Chou, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2007 – fall 2007), SIRE student (fall 2007 – spring 2008),

CBN BRAIN program intern (summer 2008). Research Specialist, Yerkes National Primate Research Center (summer, 2009 – fall 2010). Second author on a paper in Current Biology. Second author on a spoken presentation at the International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne, FL. Now consultant.

Jacey Jones, SIRE program (2006 - 2007); volunteer (summer 2007); independent study (2007 - 2008); Became a medical student at Baylor.

Michael Williams, CBN BRAIN program intern (summer 2007); FACES at Morehouse (fall 2007 - 2008). Graduate student, Wayne State University in the Clinical Psychology Program, began fall 2009. Ford Foundation Fellow, beginning 2011; Now assistant professor University of Houston.

Stacey Neilson, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2007). Kendra Williams, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2006); 499R Directed Research (2006 – 2007); was

honored during the Phi Beta Kappa induction ceremony for Ms. Williams (spring 2008). Contribution recognized in a paper in Behavioural Processes. Graduate student, Community Health Sciences and International Health and Development Departments at Tulane University, beginning fall 2009.

Hannah Kinkel, undergraduate volunteer (spring 2006); SIRE program (2006 - 2007); was honored during the Phi Beta Kappa induction ceremony for Ms. Kinkel (fall 2007). Contribution recognized in a paper in Behavioural Processes. Medical student, University of New Mexico, beginning fall 2009.

Tyrone Dash, CBN BRAIN program intern (summer 2006) Nena Hy, CBN summer BRAIN program intern (2005)

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THESIS COMMITTEES

Thomas Costello, Ph.D. (in progress)

Jonathon Engelberg, Ph.D. (in progress)

Donna McDermott, Ph.D. Population Biology, Ecology, Evolution Program (in progress)

Jessica Dugan, Ph.D. (in progress)

Ryan Brady, Ph.D. (approved May 2020)

José Eduardo Reynoso Cruz, Universidad Autonoma de Mexico (in progress)

Arthur Morrissette, Ph.D. Neuroscience program (approved October 2018)

Carlos Rodriguez, Ph.D. (approved August 2019)

Thomas Hassett, Ph.D. (approved May 2019)

Ryan Brady, M.A. (approved 2016)

Rachel Diamond, Ph.D. (approved June 2017)

Jessica Dugan, M.A. (approved February 2016)

Emily Brown, Ph.D. (approved October 2018)

Thomas Hassett, M.A. (approved December 2014)

Freddy Kamps, M.A. (approved March 2015)

John Trimper, Ph.D. (approved June 2016)

Rebecca Roberts, Ph.D. (approved November 2019)

Chi Cheung, Ph.D. (approved April 2017)

Rachel Diamond, M.A. (approved June 2014)

Allison Weiss, M.A. (approved April 2014)

Victoria Templer, Ph.D. (approved April 2014)

Emily Brown, M.A. (approved December 2013)

Claire Galloway, M.A. (approved March 2013)

Umay Suanda, Ph.D. (approved August, 2012)

Justin Bonny, Ph.D. (approved April 2013)

Benjamin Basile, Ph.D. (approved April 2013)

Shala Blue, Ph.D. (approved January 2013)

Chi Cheung, M.A. (approved April 2012)

Regina Paxton, Ph. D. (approved March, 2012)

John Trimper, M.A. (approved April, 2012)

Janice Hassett, Ph.D. (approved July, 2011)

Christina Tzeng, M.A. (approved April, 2011)

Cory Inman, M.A. (approved October, 2010)

Justin Bonny, M.A. (approved August, 2010)

Lauren McDonough, M.A. (approved April, 2010)

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THESIS COMMITTEES AND FACULTY ADVISORY COMMITTEES (CONTINUED) Ebony Glover, Ph.D. (approved April, 2010)

Courtney Glavis-Bloom, Ph.D. (approved April, 2010)

Josh Plotnik, Ph.D. (approved March, 2010)

Victoria Templer, M.A. (approved October, 2009)

Suma Mallavarapu, Ph.D. Georgia Tech Psychology (approved April, 2009)

Umay Suanda, M.A. (approved October, 2009)

Jennifer Pokorny, Ph.D. (approved March, 2009)

Magdalena Krysiak, M.A. (approved February, 2009)

Shannon Stephens, M.A. (approved November, 2008)

John Berg, M.A. (approved October, 2008)

Benjamin Basile, M.A. (approved May, 2008)

Regina Paxton, M.A. (approved October, 2007)

Kristin Bonnie, Ph.D. (approved August, 2007)

Katherine Vytal, M.A. (approved November, 2006)

Courtney Glavis-Bloom, M.A. (approved October, 2006)

Rebecca Herman Ph.D. (approved summer 2005)

Nate Kornell, Ph.D. Columbia University Psychology (approved May, 2005)

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PUBLIC OUTREACH AND SELECTED MEDIA COVERAGE Active research collaboration and public education effort with Drs. Jennifer Mickleberg and Tara

Stoinski at Zoo Atlanta. For this outreach effort we have prepared a video with the CBN describing

our work that plays at the orangutan exhibit. We have also established cognitive testing of

orangutans that is visible to zoo visitors, in addition to “behind the scenes” testing focused on

science.

Emory-UNAM Binational Mechanisms of Learning Forum

http://esciencecommons.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-neuroscience-of-learning-across.html

Our study of transitive inference by infant humans, Gazes, R. P., Hampton, R.R. & Lourenco, S.F.

(2015). Transitive Inference of Social Dominance by Human Infants. Developmental Science. DOI:

10.1111/desc.12367, was covered by Emory’s escience commons website as well as multiple

international media outlets (e.g. http://www.neuroscientistnews.com/research-news/babies-have-

logical-reasoning-age-one-study-finds)

Tu, H.W., Pani, A. & Hampton, R.R. (2015). Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca mulatta) Adaptively Adjust

Information Seeking in Response to Information Accumulated, Journal of Comparative Psychology,

129(4): 347-55. PMCID: PMC4648642 was featured in the American Psychological Association’s

Particularly Exciting Experiments in Psychology program for public outreach. This work involved

an Emory Undergraduate, Alex Pani.

Tu, H.W., & Hampton, R.R. (2014). Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) actively allocate working

memory resources. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition. doi:

10.1037/xan0000030 was featured in the American Psychological Association’s Particularly Exciting

Experiments in Psychology program for public outreach.

Washington Post, May 9, 2011. Monkeys show ability to recall patterns by Michael Marshall and Aria

Pearson

New York Times, May 2, 2011. Monkeys’ Memories Can Stretch Beyond What’s in Front of Them by

Nicholas Bakalar

Nature, Research Highlight, May 5, 2011. Monkey recalls what monkey saw.

Wired Science, April 29, 2011. Study Takes Monkey Memory to New Level by Brian Keim

New Scientist, April 28, 2011. Monkeys show signs of advanced memory powers by Michael Marshall

Emory Magazine, Humans see, monkeys too, fall 2009.

LiveScience.com, Animals think about thinking, research suggests, September 15, 2009.

http://www.livescience.com/animals/090915-thoughtful-animals.html.

Nature Research Highlight, Picture Imperfect? July 9, 2009 (vol. 460, p 154).

BBC Radio, The Naked Scientists, June 28, 2009.

BBC News online, June 25, 2009. Monkeys fall for visual illusion by Victoria Gill

Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 6, 2007. Computers gone wild by Bill Hendrick

American Psychological Association Monitor, June, 2007. Can rats reminisce? by Sadie Dingfelder

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PUBLIC OUTREACH AND SELECTED MEDIA COVERAGE (CONTINUED)

Wall Street Journal, October 27, 2006. What your pet is thinking by Sharon Begley

New Scientist, December 16, 2006. Known Unknowns by Helen Phillips

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SCIENTIFIC SERVICE

Editorial Board Learning & Behavior

Reviewer NOVA WGBH Boston

Grant Agency

Referee Comision Mexico-Estados Unidos para el Intercambio Educative y Cultural

(COMEXUS) Center for Scientific Review (CSR) R-15 study section,

National Institutes of Health: Challenge grants CSR special emphasis

panel The National Science Foundation Biotechnology and Biological

Sciences Research Council, UK

Journal Referee Animal Behaviour Animal Cognition Animal Learning and Behavior

Behaviour Behavioral and Brain Sciences Behavioral and Neural Biology

Behavioral Processes Biology letters Brain and Behavioural Research

Cognition Current Biology Ecology Ethology Hippocampus Neuron

Neruroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews Journal of Comparative

Psychology Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavioral

Processes Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, &

Cognition Learning and Memory Learning and Motivation PNAS

Psychonomic Bulletin and Review Science

Head/Coordinator Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Memory and Cognition

Collaboratory (9/6/2005 - 2010 )

CBN Psychology graduate scholar representative (5/23/2006 –

10/31/09)

University

Committee member

Business Practice Improvement (10/2011 – 2012)

Yerkes Upper Weight Limit Committee (5/2011 – 2012)

Committee on the Environment (9/1/2007 - 2011)

Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Executive Committee (9/6/2005

– 2010)

Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Venture Grant Committee

(9/6/2005 – 10/31/09)

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College, outside

Department

Education Abroad Committee (9/19 - )

Hightower Speaker Funds Committee (11/18 - )

Faculty Governance Committee (1/2013 – 5/2013)

Dean’s Teaching Fellowship Selection Committee (1/2013 – 5/2014)

Research Operations Committee (12/15/09 – 2010)

College Revisioning Committee Focus Group on "Infrastructure and Research

Support" (8/5/09 – 12/14/09)

Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology NBB Undergraduate Research

Committee (3/30/2009)

Department

Committee Member

Psychology Executive Committee (2020 - )

IT and Web page Committee (past; 2009; 2011 – 2013; 2019 - )

Joint Psychology/Yerkes faculty search committee 2018-19

Joint Psychology/Yerkes faculty search committee 2017-18

Psychology Vision Committee, spring 2017-18

Colloquium Committee Chair (fall 2013 - spring 2015)

Program director, Neuroscience and Animal Behavior (spring 2015-spring 2016;

fall 2017 – spring 2020)

Acting program director, Neuroscience and Animal Behavior (fall 2012)

Psychology Assistant Director Search Committee (2011)

Psychology Research Symposium Committee (2009; 2011)

Advisory committee for the Facility for Education and Research in

Neuroscience (FERN; 8/10/2008)

Psychology Curriculum Committee (2006 – 2009; 2015 - )

Colloquium Committee (past)

Other Non-human Primate Enrichment Committee, Laboratory of Neuro-

psychology, NIMH, 2002 to 2004

NIMH Fellows Committee 1998 to 1999