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Volume 3 (2018)

Sneddon, Lynne U.; Lopez-Luna, Javier; Wolfenden, David C.C.; Leach, Matthew C.; Valentim, Ana M.; Steenbergen, Peter J.; Bardine, Nabila; Currie, Amanda D.; Broom, Donald M.; and Brown, Culum (2018) Fish sentience denial: Muddying the waters. Animal Sentience 21(1)

Woodruff, Michael L. (2018) Pain in fish: Evidence from peripheral nociceptors to pallial processing. Animal Sentience 21(2)

Adamo, Shelley (2018) Sentience, the final frontier..... Animal Sentience 21(3)

Porcher, Ila France (2018) Fish sentience, consciousness, and AI. Animal Sentience 21(4)

Jones, Robert C. (2018) Fish sentience denial: Muddy moral water. Animal Sentience 21(5)

Yokawa, Ken and Baluška, František (2018) Fish and plant sentience: Anesthetized plants and fishes cannot respond to stimuli. Animal Sentience 21(6)

Meyers-Manor, Julia E. (2018) If it looks like a duck: Fish fit the criteria for pain perception. Animal Sentience 21(7)

Jacquet, Jennifer (2018) Defining denial and sentient seafood. Animal Sentience 21(8)

Martin, Loren and Gerlai, Robert (2018) Sentience: All or none or matter of degree?. Animal Sentience 21(9)

Diggles, Ben and Browman, Howard I. (2018) Denialism and muddying the water or organized skepticism and clarity? THAT is the question. Animal Sentience 21(10)

Birch, Jonathan (2018) Degrees of sentience?. Animal Sentience 21(11)

Manzotti, Riccardo (2018) The human nervous system is not the gold standard for pain. Animal Sentience 21(12)

Demin, Konstantin A.; Lakstygal, Anton M.; and Kalueff, Allan V. (2018) Time to (finally) acknowledge that fish have emotionality and pain. Animal Sentience 21(13)

Walters, Edgar T. (2018) Defining pain and painful sentience in animals. Animal Sentience 21(14)

da Silva, Marissol Leite; Maximino, Caio; and Siqueira-Silva, Diógenes Henrique (2018) Nocifensive behavior as evidence for sentient pain in fish. Animal Sentience 21(15)

Franks, Becca; Sebo, Jeff; and Horowitz, Alexandra (2018) Fish are smart and feel pain: What about joy?. Animal Sentience 21(16)

Sneddon, Lynne U.; Wolfenden, David C.C.; Leach, Matthew C.; Valentim, Ana M.; Steenbergen, Peter J.; Bardine, Nabila; Broom, Donald M.; and Brown, Culum (2018) Ample evidence for fish sentience and pain. Animal Sentience 21(17)

Andrade, Michaella P. and Santos, Charles Morphy D. (2019) On neglected taxa: Protostomes and the evolution of myelination. Animal Sentience 21(18)

Cook, Peter; Prichard, Ashley; Spivak, Mark; and Berns, Gregory S. (2018) Jealousy in dogs? Evidence from brain imaging. Animal Sentience 22(1)

Vonk, Jennifer (2018) Researchers, not dogs, lack control in an experiment on jealousy. Animal Sentience 22(2)

Singer, Peter (2018) Finding the green-eyed monster in the brain of a dog. Animal Sentience 22(3)

Zentall, Thomas R. (2018) Jealousy, competition, or a contextual cue for reward?. Animal Sentience 22(4)

Mobbs, Dean (2018) What can the social emotions of dogs teach us about human emotions?. Animal Sentience 22(5)

Howell, Tiffani J. (2018) Can neuroimaging in dogs have practical implications?. Animal Sentience 22(6)

Walsh, Carolyn J. (2018) Lessons from behaviour for brain imaging. Animal Sentience 22(7)

Harmon-Jones, Eddie and Harmon-Jones, Sylvia K. (2018) On jealousy, envy, sex differences and temperament in humans and dogs. Animal Sentience 22(8)

Denson, Thomas F. (2018) Inferring emotion from amygdala activation alone is problematic. Animal Sentience 22(9)

Morris, Paul (2018) Limits of neuroscience. Animal Sentience 22(10)

Jiang, Yaoguang; Huttunen, Annamarie W.; and Platt, Michael L. (2018) Can a dog be jealous?. Animal Sentience 22(11)

van Kleef, Gerben A. (2018) Emotional reactions in non-human animals and social-functional theories of emotion. Animal Sentience 22(12)

Adolphs, Ralph (2018) What would we like to know by imaging the brains of dogs?. Animal Sentience 22(14)

Silver, Zachary A. and Santos, Laurie R. (2018) Understanding dogs' neural responses in a food-giving paradigm. Animal Sentience 22(15)

Prato Previde, Emanuela and Valsecchi, Paola (2018) What is it like to be a jealous dog?. Animal Sentience 22(16)

Overall, Karen L. (2018) Dogs aren’t jealous – they are just asking for accurate information. Animal Sentience 22(17)

Bräuer, Juliane and Amici, Federica (2018) Fake or not: Two prerequisites for jealousy. Animal Sentience 22(18)

Marazziti, Donatella (2018) Only the human brain has the cognitive capacity for jealousy. Animal Sentience 22(19)

Horowitz, Alexandra; Franks, Becca; and Sebo, Jeff (2018) Fill-in-the-blank-emotion in dogs? Evidence from brain imaging. Animal Sentience 22(20)

Abdai, Judit and Miklósi, Ádám (2018) Displaying jealous behavior versus experiencing jealousy. Animal Sentience 22(21)

Webb, Christine E. and de Waal, Frans B. M. (2018) Situating the study of jealousy in the context of social relationships. Animal Sentience 22(22)

Cook, Peter F. and Berns, Gregory S (2018) The degeneracy of behavior and the rise of neuroimaging to measure affective states in dogs. Animal Sentience 22(23)

Chapman, Colin A. and Huffman, Michael A. (2018) Why do we want to think humans are different?. Animal Sentience 23(1)

Juergens, Uta Maria (2018) Human and nonhuman animals: Equals in uniqueness. Animal Sentience 23(2)

Benvenuti, Anne (2018) Good news: Humans are neither distinct nor superior. Animal Sentience 23(3)

Shackelford, Todd K. (2018) Can they suffer?. Animal Sentience 23(4)

Rollin, Bernard (2018) Human superiority?. Animal Sentience 23(5)

Wilson, Vanessa (2018) Using anthropocentrism to the benefit of other species. Animal Sentience 23(6)

Hall, Tara Fox (2018) Why humans are different. Animal Sentience 23(7)

Fischer, Bob (2018) Individuals in the wild. Animal Sentience 23(8)

Ristau, Carolyn A. (2018) Insulting words: "They are animals!". Animal Sentience 23(10)

Blystad, Magnus Helgheim (2018) Human-like behavior and cognition: Not a good starting point. Animal Sentience 23(11)

Benz-Schwarzburg, Judith (2018) We don’t want to know what we know. Animal Sentience 23(12)

Ross, Don (2018) Two fallacies in comparisons between humans and non-humans. Animal Sentience 23(13)

Fawcett, Anne and McGreevy, Paul (2018) What sets us apart could be our salvation. Animal Sentience 23(14)

Edmondson, William H. (2018) Is superiority a necessary aspect of cruelty?. Animal Sentience 23(15)

Bartsch, Karen (2019) Developmental aspects of capacities. Animal Sentience 23(16)

Monsó, Susana (2019) Humans are superior — by human standards. Animal Sentience 23(17)

Woodruff, Michael L. (2019) Sentience is the foundation of animal rights. Animal Sentience 23(18)

Wilson, Michael L. and Lehman, Clarence L. (2019) Humans: Uniquely responsible for causing conservation problems, uniquely capable of solving them. Animal Sentience 23(19)

Rogers, Lesley J. (2019) More evidence of complex cognition in nonhuman species. Animal Sentience 23(20)

Vonk, Jennifer (2019) Unique in degree not kindness. Animal Sentience 23(21)

Pepperberg, Irene M. (2019) Animal sentience is not enough to motivate conservation. Animal Sentience 23(22)

Spiegel, Rainer (2019) Non-human animals providing rescue in medical emergencies. Animal Sentience 23(23)

Kaplan, Gisela (2019) Mirror neurons and humanity’s dark side. Animal Sentience 23(24)

Wallner, Bernard (2019) Of course, humans are not unique!. Animal Sentience 23(25)

Paez, Eze (2019) Humans may be unique and superior — and that is irrelevant. Animal Sentience 23(26)

Johannsen, Kyle (2019) Are some animals also moral agents?. Animal Sentience 23(27)

McGrew, William C. (2019) Humans have always been unique!. Animal Sentience 23(28)

Broude, Gwen J. (2019) Phooey on comparisons. Animal Sentience 23(29)

Kiley-Worthington, Marthe (2019) Anthropomorphism is the first step. Animal Sentience 23(30)

Bar-Hen-Schweiger, Moran and Henik, Avishai (2019) Intelligence as mental manipulation in humans and nonhuman animals. Animal Sentience 23(31)

Freeman, Carrie P. (2019) Taking exception to human exceptionalism. Animal Sentience 23(32)

Palagi, Elisabetta (2019) Sharing emotions builds bridges between individuals and between species. Animal Sentience 23(33)

Price, Catherine (2019) Human and nonhuman animals: Towards equality. Animal Sentience 23(34)

Hood, S. Brian and Giddens, Sophia (2019) Phenotypic similarity and moral consideration. Animal Sentience 23(35)

Ng, Yew-Kwang (2019) Human superiority is obvious but does not justify cruelty. Animal Sentience 23(36)

Kopnina, Helen (2019) Anthropocentrism: Practical remedies needed. Animal Sentience 23(37)

Criscione, Matthew J. and Keenan, Julian Paul (2019) Our brains make us out to be unique in ways we are not. Animal Sentience 23(38)

Hermanson, Sean (2019) Is human uniqueness fake news?. Animal Sentience 23(39)

Marino, Lori (2019) “I am not an animal”. Animal Sentience 23(40)

Merskin, Debra (2019) Across the great divide. Animal Sentience 23(41)

Schoof, Valérie A. M. and L'Allier, Simon (2019) Mobilizing heads and hearts for wildlife conservation. Animal Sentience 23(42)

Iotchev, Ivaylo Borislavov and Costa, Kauê Machado (2019) Animal cognition: Quantity has a quality of its own. Animal Sentience 23(44)

Nafcha, Orit and Gabay, Shai (2019) Corticocentric bias in cognitive neuroscience. Animal Sentience 23(45)

Ball, Derek and Sachs, Benjamin (2019) Scepticism about moral superiority. Animal Sentience 23(46)

Simon, Carsta (2019) Taking Darwinism seriously. Animal Sentience 23(47)

Chapman, Colin A. and Huffman, Michael A (2019) Refining thoughts about human/nonhuman differences. Animal Sentience 23(48)

Jung, Christoph (2019) Why cod don't like to sunbathe: Quantity and quality in the animal kingdom. Animal Sentience 23(49)

Atran, Scott (2019) Superior or inferior, human uniqueness is manifold. Animal Sentience 23(50)

Chapman, Colin A. and Huffman, Michael A. (2019) Diversity on human difference: Unanimity on human responsibility. Animal Sentience 23(51)

Zangwill, Nick (2021) Why do Chapman & Huffman think humans are not different?. Animal Sentience 23(53)

Gough, Joe (2022) Defending human difference by raising the bar. Animal Sentience 23(54)

Porcher, Ila France (2023) The elephant in the garden. Animal Sentience 23(55)