XIMENA NELSON
  • Home
  • Publications- all
    • Birds - falcons, kea parrots and chooks
    • Portia, and other clever spiders
    • Jumping spider vision & attention
    • Mimicry and ant associate jumping spiders
    • Mosquito-eating jumping spiders
    • Beetle acoustics
    • Crowdsourcing, deceptive signalling, nectar-eating spiders and others
  • Projects
    • Kea cognition
    • Kea ecology & communication
    • Spider vision
    • Border biosecurity
    • Mimicry
    • Falcons
    • Predator-prey assessment
    • Personality
  • Students- present and past
  • Media interest
  • Collaborators
  • Photos
  • Aguilar-Argüello, S., Taylor, A. H., Nelson, X. J. 2020. Jumping spiders attend to information from multiple modalities when preparing to jump. Animal Behaviour In Press
  • Aguilar-Argüello, S., Nelson, X. J. In Press. Jumping spiders: An exceptional group for comparative cognition studies. Learning & Behavior.
  • Aguilar-Argüello, S., Gerhard, D., Nelson, X. J. 2020. Distance assessment of detours by jumping spiders. Current Zoology 66, 263-273. doi:10.1093/cz/zoz044
  • Aguilar-Argüello, S., Gerhard, D., Nelson, X.J. 2019. Risk assessment and the use of novel shortcuts in spatial detouring tasks in jumping spiders. Behavioral Ecology 30, 1488-1498. doi:10.1093/beheco/arz105
  • Nelson, X. J., Warui, C. M., Jackson, R. R. 2012. Widespread reliance on olfactory sex and species identification by Lyssomanine and Spartaeine jumping spiders. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 107: 664-677. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2012.01965.x
  • Nelson, X. J., Jackson, R. R. 2012. The role of numerical competence in a specialized predatory strategy of an araneophagic spider. Animal Cognition 15: 699-710. doi: 10.1007/s10071-012-0498-6
  • Jackson, R. R., Nelson, X. J. 2012. Attending to detail by communal spider-eating spiders. Animal Cognition 15: 461-471. doi:10.1007/s10071-012-0469-y 
  • Jackson, R. R, Nelson, X. J. 2011. Reliance on trial and error signal derivation by Portia africana, an araneophagic jumping spider. Journal of Ethology 29: 301-307. doi:10.1007/s10164-010-0258-5
  • Nelson, X. J., Jackson, R. R. 2011. Flexibility in the foraging strategies of spiders. In: Spider Behaviour: flexibility and versatility (Ed., M. E. Herberstein). Cambridge University Press. Pp. 31-56. 
  • Nelson, X. J., Jackson, R. R. 2011. Flexible use of anti-predator defences. In: Spider Behaviour: flexibility and versatility (Ed., M. E. Herberstein). Cambridge University Press. Pp. 99-126. 
Proudly powered by Weebly