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Sebastian Grueneisen
Sebastian Grueneisen
Verified email at uni-leipzig.de - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
“I know you don't know I know…” Children use second‐order false‐belief reasoning for peer coordination
S Grueneisen, E Wyman, M Tomasello
Child Development 86 (1), 287-293, 2015
992015
Chimpanzees return favors at a personal cost
M Schmelz, S Grueneisen, A Kabalak, J Jost, M Tomasello
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114 (28), 7462-7467, 2017
592017
Children coordinate in a recurrent social dilemma by taking turns and along dominance asymmetries.
S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Developmental psychology 53 (2), 265, 2017
532017
Conceptualizing emotions along the dimensions of valence, arousal, and communicative frequency–implications for social-cognitive tests and training tools
R Hepach, D Kliemann, S Grüneisen, HR Heekeren, I Dziobek
Frontiers in psychology 2, 266, 2011
532011
The development of prosocial behavior—from sympathy to strategy
S Grueneisen, F Warneken
Current opinion in psychology 43, 323-328, 2022
472022
Children delay gratification for cooperative ends
R Koomen, S Grueneisen, E Herrmann
Psychological science 31 (2), 139-148, 2020
462020
Children use salience to solve coordination problems
S Grueneisen, E Wyman, M Tomasello
Developmental Science 18 (3), 495-501, 2015
372015
Children, chimpanzees, and bonobos adjust the visibility of their actions for cooperators and competitors
S Grueneisen, S Duguid, H Saur, M Tomasello
Scientific reports 7 (1), 8504, 2017
282017
Common knowledge that help is needed increases helping behavior in children
B Siposova, S Grueneisen, K Helming, M Tomasello, M Carpenter
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 201, 104973, 2021
182021
Why should I trust you? Investigating young children’s spontaneous mistrust in potential deceivers
R Stengelin, S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Cognitive Development 48, 146-154, 2018
182018
Conforming to coordinate: Children use majority information for peer coordination
S Grueneisen, E Wyman, M Tomasello
British Journal of Developmental Psychology 33 (1), 136-147, 2015
162015
Children use rules to coordinate in a social dilemma
S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 179, 362-374, 2019
142019
Reduced risk-seeking in chimpanzees in a zero-outcome game
S Keupp, S Grueneisen, EA Ludvig, F Warneken, AP Melis
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 376 (1819), 20190673, 2021
112021
The strategies used by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and children (Homo sapiens) to solve a simple coordination problem.
S Duguid, E Wyman, S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Journal of Comparative Psychology 134 (4), 401, 2020
112020
How fairness and dominance guide young children’s bargaining decisions
S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Child Development 93 (5), 1318-1333, 2022
52022
The psychological mechanisms underlying reciprocal prosociality in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
M Schmelz, S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Journal of Comparative Psychology 134 (2), 149, 2020
52020
The ontogeny and evolution of cooperation
S Grüneisen, E Wyman
The Cambridge handbook of evolutionary perspectives on human behavior, 265-275, 2020
42020
Young children's adaptive partner choice in cooperation and competition contexts
S Grueneisen, G Török, A Wathiyage Don, A Ruggeri
Child Development, 2023
32023
Children show economic trust for both ingroup and outgroup partners
S Grueneisen, A Rosati, F Warneken
Cognitive Development 59, 101077, 2021
32021
The development of coordination via joint expectations for shared benefits.
S Grueneisen, M Tomasello
Developmental Psychology 56 (6), 1149, 2020
32020
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