
Dr. Christian Schlögl
Purview
Science management for collaborative projects involving the German Primate Center and the University of Göttingen
Currently, I am the scientific manager of the Leibniz Gradute School Primate Cognition and the Collaborative Research Center 1528 - Cognition of Interaction.
Short Profile
I am a trained cognitive biologist and science manager; my earlier research initially focused on gaze following and perspective taking in corvids. Later, I focused on causal understanding and logical reasoning in various corvids, parrots and long-tailed monkeys.
After moving into science management, I initially managed a Leibniz Graduate School and set up the Behavior and Cognition doctoral program.
In recent years, my focus has been on supporting large collaborative projects and managing funded projects.
Service
My responsibilities include the writing of third-party funding applications and the support of (mainly collaborative) grant applications, financial administration and resource management, organising selection and recruitment processes, event planning and management, public relations, data management, reporting and assisting the boards of the various initiatives
Publications
1. Schloegl, C. & Fischer, J. (2017): Causal Reasoning in nonhuman animals. In: The Oxford Handbook of Causal Reasoning (ed. by. M.R. Waldmann); Oxford: Oxford University Press; pp. 699-716
2. Schmitt, V., Schloegl, C. & Fischer, J. (2014): Seeing the experimenter influences the response to pointing cues in long-tailed macaques; PLoS One, 9(3), e91348
3. Weiß, B.M., Schloegl, C. & Scheiber, I.B.R. (2013): How to tell friend from foe. Cognition in a complex society. In: The social life of Greylag geese: Patterns, Mechanisms and Evolutionary Functions in an Avian Model System (ed. by I.B.R. Scheiber, B.M. Weiß, and K. Kotrschal); Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; pp. 173-188
4. Schloegl, C., Waldmann, M.R. & Fischer, J. (2013): Understanding of and reasoning about object-object relationships in long-tailed macaques?; Animal Cognition, 16(3), 493-507
5. Mikolasch, S., Kotrschal, K. & Schloegl, C. (2013): Transitive inference in jackdaws (Corvus monedula); Behavioural Processes, 92, 113-117
6. Henselek, Y., Fischer, J. & Schloegl, C. (2012): Does the stimulus type influence horses performance in a quantity discrimination task?; Frontiers in Comparative Psychology, 3, 504
7. Schloegl, C., Schmidt, J., Boeckle, M., Weiß, B.M. & Kotrschal, K. (2012): Grey parrots use inferential reasoning based on acoustic cues alone; Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B; 279, 4135-4142
8. Mikolasch, S., Kotrschal, K. & Schloegl, C. (2012): The influence of local enhancement on choice performances in African grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus) and jackdaws (Corvus monedula); Journal of Comparative Psychology, 126, 399-406
9. Mikolasch, S., Kotrschal, K. & Schloegl, C. (2012): Is caching the key to exclusion in corvids? The case of carrion crows (Corvus corone corone); Animal Cognition, 15 (1), 73-82
10. González-Jaramillo, M., Schloegl, C. & de la Cueva, H. (2011): Opportunistic, induced adoption as a conservation measure: insights into parent-offspring recognition behaviour in the magnificent frigatebird; Northwestern Naturalist, 57(3), 335-337
11. Schmidt, J., Scheid, C., Kotrschal, K., Bugnyar T. & Schloegl, C. (2011): Gaze direction – A cue for hidden food in rooks (Corvus frugilegus)?; Behavioural Processes, 88 (2), 88-93
12. Mikolasch, S., Kotrschal, K. & Schloegl, C. (2011): African grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus) use inference by exclusion to find hidden food; Biology letters; 7, 875-877
13. Schloegl, C. (2011): What you see is what you get – reloaded: Can jackdaws detect hidden food through exclusion?; Journal of Comparative Psychology, 125 (2), 162-174
14. Kehmeier, S., Schloegl, C., Scheiber, I.B.R. & Weiß, B.M. (2011): Early development of gaze following into distant space in juvenile Greylag geese (Anser anser); Animal Cognition, 14 (4), 477-485
15. Kenward, B., Schloegl, C., Rutz, C., Weir, A.A.S., Bugnyar, T. & Kacelnik, K. (2011): On the evolutionary and ontogenetic origins of tool-oriented behaviour in New Caledonian crows (Corvus moneduloides); Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 102, 870-877
16. Weiß, B.M., Kehmeier, S. & Schloegl, C. (2010): Transitive inference in free-living greylag geese (Anser anser); Animal Behaviour, 79, 1277-1283
17. Loretto, M. – C., Schloegl, C. & Bugnyar T. (2010): Northern bald ibises follow others' gaze into distant space but not behind barriers; Biology letters, 6, 14-17
18. Schloegl, C., Dierks, A., Gajdon, G., Huber, L., Kotrschal, K. & Bugnyar, T. (2009): What you see is what you get? Exclusion performances in ravens and keas; PLoS One, 4(8), e6368
19. Kehmeier, S., Scheiber, I.B.R., Schloegl, C. & Weiß, B.M. (2009): Gaze following in hand-raised greylag goslings; Primate Report, Special Issue, February 2009; 20 (published abstract)
20. Schloegl, C., Dierks, A., Gajdon, G.K., Huber, L. Kotrschal, K. & Bugnyar, T. (2009): Inference by exclusion in ravens, jackdaws and keas; Primate Report, Special Issue, February 2009; 32 (published abstract)
21. Weiß, B.M., Kehmeier, S., Mikolasch, S. & Schloegl, C. (2009): Transitive inference in greylag geese; Primate Report, Special Issue, February 2009; 38 (published abstract)
22. Schloegl, C., Bugnyar, T. & Aust, U. (2009): Exclusion performances in non-human animals: from chimpanzees to pigeons and back again. In: Rational animals, irrational humans (ed. by A. Blaisdell, L. Huber, S. Watanabe, Young, A., and Y. Yamazaki); Tokyo: Keio University Press; pp. 217-234
23. Schloegl, C., Schmidt, J., Scheid, C., Kotrschal, K. & Bugnyar, T. (2008): Gaze following in non-human animals – The corvid example. In: Animal Behaviour: New Research (ed. by E. A. Weber & L. H. Krause); New York: Nova Science Publishers; pp. 73-92
24. Schloegl, C., Kotrschal, K. & Bugnyar T. (2008): Do Common Ravens (Corvus corax) rely on human or conspecific gaze cues to detect hidden food?; Animal Cognition; 11, 231-241
25. Schwab, C., Bugnyar, T., Schloegl, C. & Kotrschal, K. (2008): Enhanced social learning between siblings in Common Ravens (Corvus corax); Animal Behaviour; 75, 501-508
26. Schloegl, C., Kotrschal, K. & Bugnyar, T. (2008): Modifying the object-choice task: Is the way you look important for ravens?; Behavioural Processes; 77(1), 61-65
27. Stöwe, M., Bugnyar, T., Schloegl, C., Heinrich, B., Kotrschal, K. & Möstl, E. (2008): Corticosterone excretion patterns and affiliative behaviour over development in ravens (Corvus corax); Hormones & Behaviour; 53, 208-216
28. Schloegl, C., Kotrschal K. & Bugnyar T. (2007): Gaze following in Common Ravens (Corvus corax): Ontogeny and Habituation; Animal Behaviour; 74, 769-778
29. Bugnyar, T., Schwab, C., Schloegl, C., Kotrschal, K. & Heinrich B. (2007): Ravens Judge Competitors Through Experience with Play Caching; Current Biology; 17, 1804-1808
30. Range, F., Bugnyar, T., Schloegl, C. & Kotrschal, K. (2006): Individual and sex differences in learning abilities of ravens; Behavioural processes, 73(1), 100-106
31. Stöwe, M., Bugynar, T., Loretto, M.-C., Schloegl, C., Range, F. & Kotrschal, K. (2006): Novel object exploration in ravens (Corvus corax): Effects of social relationships; Behavioural processes, 73(1), 68-75
More Information
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