%0 Journal Article %A Janmaat, Karline R. L. %+ Chimpanzees, Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max Planck Society %T What animals do not do or fail to find: A novel observational approach for studying cognition in the wild : %G eng %U https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0004-8162-B %R 10.1002/evan.21794 %7 2019-08 %D 2019 %* Review method: peer-reviewed %X Abstract To understand how our brain evolved and what it is for, we are in urgent need of knowledge about the cognitive skills of a large variety of animal species and individuals, and their relationships to rapidly disappearing social and ecological conditions. But how do we obtain this knowledge? Studying cognition in the wild is a challenge. Field researchers (and their study subjects) face many factors that can easily interfere with their variables of interest. Although field studies of cognition present unique challenges, they are still invaluable for understanding the evolutionary drivers of cognition. In this review, I discuss the advantages and urgency of field-based studies on animal cognition and introduce a novel observational approach for field research that is guided by three questions: (a) what do animals fail to find?, (b) what do they not do?, and (c) what do they only do when certain conditions are met? My goal is to provide guidance to future field researchers examining primate cognition. %K animal cognition, brain evolution, chimpanzees, field-based studies, foraging behavior, fruit, observational approach, rainforest %J Evolutionary Anthropology %O Evol. Anthropol. %V 28 %N 6 %& 303 %P 303 - 320 %I Wiley-Liss %C New York, NY %@ 1060-1538 %U https://www.mpg.de/13817438/0819-evan-019609-studying-animal-cognition-in-the-wild-a-new-guideline