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Cynthia Tedore
Cynthia Tedore
University of Hamburg
Verified email at tedore.com - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Technical and conceptual considerations for using animated stimuli in studies of animal behavior
L Chouinard-Thuly, S Gierszewski, GG Rosenthal, SM Reader, G Rieucau, ...
Current zoology 63 (1), 5-19, 2017
1002017
Avian UV vision enhances leaf surface contrasts in forest environments
C Tedore, DE Nilsson
Nature communications 10 (1), 238, 2019
542019
Weaponry, color, and contest success in the jumping spider Lyssomanes viridis
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Behavioural processes 89 (3), 203-211, 2012
462012
Visual mutual assessment of size in male Lyssomanes viridis jumping spider contests
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Behavioral Ecology 26 (2), 510-518, 2015
332015
Using RGB displays to portray color realistic imagery to animal eyes
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Current Zoology 63 (1), 27-34, 2017
242017
Pheromones exert top-down effects on visual recognition in the jumping spider Lyssomanes viridis
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Journal of Experimental Biology 216 (9), 1744-1756, 2013
172013
The jumping spider Saitis barbipes lacks a red photoreceptor to see its own sexually dimorphic red coloration
M Glenszczyk, D Outomuro, M Gregorič, S Kralj-Fišer, JM Schneider, ...
The Science of Nature 109 (1), 6, 2022
152022
Immunological dependence of plant-dwelling animals on the medicinal properties of their plant substrates: a preliminary test of a novel evolutionary hypothesis
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Arthropod-plant interactions 9 (5), 437-446, 2015
102015
Ultraviolet vision aids the detection of nutrient-dense non-signaling plant foods
C Tedore, DE Nilsson
Vision Research 183, 16-29, 2021
92021
Disentangling the visual cues used by a jumping spider to locate its microhabitat
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Journal of Experimental Biology 219 (15), 2396-2401, 2016
72016
Peacock spiders prefer image statistics of average natural scenes over those of male ornamentation
MC Hardenbicker, C Tedore
Behavioral Ecology 34 (5), 719-728, 2023
32023
Partial wing transparency works better when disrupting wing edges: Evidence from a field experiment
M Arias, L Leroy, C Madec, L Matos, C Tedore, M Elias, D Gomez
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 34 (11), 1840-1846, 2021
22021
The role of detectability in the evolution of avian-dispersed fruit color
C Tedore, K Tedore, D Westcott, C Suttner, DE Nilsson
Vision Research 196, 108046, 2022
12022
A comparison of photographic and spectrometric methods to quantify the colours seen by animal eyes
C Tedore
Methods in Ecology and Evolution 15 (1), 4-23, 2024
2024
Deep neural network and field experiments reveal how transparent wing windows reduce detectability in moths
M Arias, C Tedore, M Elias, L Leroy, C Madec, L Matos, JP Renoult, ...
bioRxiv, 2020.11. 27.401497, 2020
2020
http://jeb. biologists. org/lookup/doi/10.1242/jeb. 071118 Access the most recent version at
C Tedore, S Johnsen
2013
A scanning retina with a narrow field of view: Do jumping spiders examine entire objects or only parts
C Tedore, S Johnsen
Front. Physiol. Conference Abstract: International Conference on …, 2013
2013
Focus on everything
C Clabby, C Tedore
2013
The Perceptual and Decision-Making Processes Guiding Species and Sex Recognition and Rival Assessment in the Jumping Spider Lyssomanes viridis
CA Tedore
Duke University, 2013
2013
Technical and conceptual considerations for using animated stimuli in studies of animal
L CHOUINARD-THULY, S GIERSZEWSKI, GG ROSENTHAL, ...
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