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Lesley Rogers

Prof, Zoology

Qualifications

B.Sc. (Hons) (Adel), D.Phil., D.Sc. (Sus), FAIBiol., FAA

Contact

Email: lrogers@une.edu.au
Room: Postgraduate Annexe Building
Phone: 02 6773 3969 (or +61 2 6773 3969 overseas)
Fax: 02 6773 3452

Phone:  (02) 6773 3969 or (02) 6773 2733
Fax:       (02) 6773 3452

General information:

  • Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
    http://www.science.org.au/scientists//lr.ht
  • Australian Vice Chancellors' Committee representative on the Animal Research Review Panel
  • Founder of the Research Centre for Neuroscience and Animal Behaviour in the School of Biological, Biomedical and Molecular Sciences at the University of New England

 

Areas of Teaching

  • Zoology 326 (Animal Behaviour) 
  • Biology 110 (Animal Behaviour Lectures)
  • Women's Studies (Politics and Biology
  • Honours in Biological Sciences
  • Postgraduate training (see below)

Research interests

  • Development of the brain and behaviour especially the development of structural and functional lateralisation in the brain and the effects of early experience and hormones on brain development
  • Advantages and disadvantages of brain lateralization, using the chick as a model
  • Hand preferences and other types of lateralization, as well as social behaviour and exploration in marmosets
  • Evolution of brain lateralization and behaviour
  • Higher cognitive function in birds and primates (including field research)

Research funding

  • Supported continuously since 1974 by the Australian Research Council (ARC)
  • 1998-2002 (inclusive) Special Investigator Award from the ARC. Species investigated: chickens, marmosets (Prof. Rogers has a colony of marmosets at UNE), toads and lung fish, together with field work on orang-utans and Australian birds
  • 2003-2004 ARC Discovery Grant to investigate "Are there advantages in having a lateralized brain?"
  • A number of University Research Grants to conduct field work on orang-utans and the Australian magpie (jointly with G. Kaplan)
  • 2004-2006 ARC Discovery grant jointly with Prof. Gisela Kaplan to investigate “Higher cognition and hemispheric specialization in an avian species: referential and intentional communication”.
  • 2005-2009 ARC Discovery grant to investigate “Brain lateralization: its function, evolution, development and change with ageing”.

Awards:

Visiting Professor Award, Centre for Excellence in Psychology, The University of Memphis (1990), University of New England Academic Women’s Special Achievement Award (1993), Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Research, University of New England (1997), Elected as a Fellow of the Australian Institute for Biology (1998), Australian Research Council Special Investigator Award (1998-2002 inclusive), Elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (2000). Awarded the Clarke Medal (2004) from the Royal Society of New South Wales for her research in zoology.

Biography

Professor Lesley Rogers has made outstanding contributions to understanding brain development and behaviour. She discovered lateralization in the chick forebrain, when lateralization was still believed to be a unique feature of the human brain. Later it became known that hemispheric specialisation is ubiquitous in the animal kingdom. Rogers also discovered that lateralization of visual projections and visual behaviour is caused by exposure of the chick embryo to light just before hatching. The developing chick brain proved to be an excellent model for investigating the influence of hormonal and experiential factors on neural and behavioural development, and memory formation.

Lesley Rogers is Professor of Neuroscience and Animal Behaviour at the University of New England. In 2000 she was elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science on the basis of her strong international reputation in the field of brain and behaviour. She graduated with a First Class B.Sc. Honours degree from the University of Adelaide in 1964 and then spent 7 years overseas at Harvard University, the New England Medical Center Hospital and the University of Sussex. She received her D.Phil. degree from the University of Sussex in 1971 for a thesis entitled Testosterone, isthmo-optic lesions and visual search in chicken and then she returned to Australia, appointed to the Physiology Department at Monash University. From 1996 to 1997 she was a Senior Research Fellow at the Australian National University and from 1978 to 1985 she appointed to the Pharmacology Department at Monash University. She joined the University of New England in 1985 and was appointed to a personal Chair in 1993. In 1987 the University of Sussex awarded her a Doctor of Science degree for her research over the years following her D. Phil degree. In 1997 she received the Vice Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Research.

Her research on brain development and animal behaviour has been funded by the Australian research Council continuously from the 1970s and from 1998 to 2002 she held an ARC Special Investigator Award for her research on lateralization of brain function and its changes during development and aging. Most of her current research focuses on the chick and the marmoset, as model systems for study, but she is interested in evolution of lateralization and also works on frogs, toads, other avian species and orang-utans.

In addition to her research interests, Prof. Rogers has served the university as Chair of the Animal Ethics Committee, Chair of the Research Doctoral Committee, Head of the Department of Physiology (1991-1995) and Deputy Chair of the Academic Board. Outside of UNE she has been Subpanel Chair of Biological Sciences for the Animal Research Council's Research Training and Careers Committee (1997-1999) and is currently a member of the Australian Research Review Panel, which deals with animal welfare in research. She has also been President of the Australian Society for the Study of Animal Behaviour in NSW, President of the International Society for Comparative Psychology, editor of the International Journal of Comparative Psychology, associate editor of the Asia Pacific Journal of Pharmacology and a member of the editorial boards of Developmental Psychobiology (current), Bird Behaviour and Laterality (current).

She combines her research interests with a commitment to communicating science to a broader audience, in radio and television interviews, public lectures and writing books. This interest extends to her active role in promoting the role of women in science and addressing issues of biology and politics (sexism and racism).

She conducts collaborative research with Prof. Gisela Kaplan, Prof. Gorgio Vallortigara (University of Trieste, Italy), Prof. Martine Hausberger (University of Rennes, France) and Prof. Richard Andrew (University of Sussex, U.K.).

Current projects of postgraduate students

Students supervised by Professor Rogers (most supervised jointly with Prof. G. Kaplan)

  • Welfare of marmosets in captivity (Mathew Pines) - submitted 2005
  • Behaviour of wild and rehabilitating orang-utans (Helga Peters) - submitted 2005
  • Lateralization and fear responses in dogs (Nick Branson)
  • Alarm vocalizations in Australian magpies (Adam Koboroff)

Previous projects of postgraduate students at UNE

  • Aspects of behaviour in chicks (Kerut Astiningshi) MSc awarded 1988
  • Behavioural and neural aspects of visual lateralization in the chick (Patrice Adret) PhD awarded 1990
  • Neurochemical and behavioural factors affecting the sensitive period for imprinting (Carl Parsons) PhD awarded 1995
  • Behavioural and neurochemical lateralization associated with imprinting in the chick (Amy Johnston) PhD awarded 1996 
  • Influence of odorants on the behaviour of the chick (Tom Burne) PhD awarded 1997
  • Behavioural lateralization in the Marmoset (Michelle Hook-Costigan) PhD awarded 1998 
  • Lateralization in anurans - (Andrew Robins) PhD awarded 2002 
  • Hemispheric specialization for processing species specific vocalizations by marmosets (Gabriella Shuster) MSc awarded 2002
  • Reactions of marmosets to stress (Nicola Hill) – awarded 2003
  • Evolution of brain lateralisation (Guiseppe Lippolis)- awarded 2004

Publications (1996 - early 2005)

Books

  1. Bradshaw, J.L. and Rogers, L.J. The Evolution of Lateral Asymmetries, Language, Tool Use and Intellect, Academic Press, 463 pp (1993) (ISBN 0-12-124560-8).
  2. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. Orang-Utans in Borneo, University of New England Press, 196 pp (1994) (ISBN 1-875821-13-9).
  3. Rogers, L.J. The Development of Brain and Behaviour in the Chicken, CAB International, 273 pp (1995) (ISBN 0-85198-924-1).
  4. Rogers, L.J. (1997) Minds of their Own: Thinking and Awareness in Animals. Allen and Unwin, St Leonards, pp. 212. (ISBN 1-86448-504-3). Also published by Westview Press, Colorado, 1998 (ISBN 0-8133-9065-6) and in translation to Japanese by Seidosha, 1999 (ISBN4-7917-5725-4).
  5. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (1998) Not Only Roars and Rituals: Communication in Animals. Allen and Unwin, St Leonards, pp. 230 (ISBN 1 86448 798 4).
  6. Rogers, L.J. (1999) Sexing the Brain. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, pp. 166 (ISBN 0 297 84276 5 ) and Columbia University Press, N.Y., 2000 (ISBN 0231120109) and Phoenix Paperback, London, 2000 (ISBN 0 75381 023 9). Translated into Italian and published by Giulio Einadi, 2000 (ISBN 88-06-15543-1) title Sesso e Cervello. Translated into Chinese and published by Shenhuo, Dushu, Xinzhi (SDX) Joint Publishing Co, China, Taiwan and Korea, 2001. Translated into Korean and published by Darunwoori, 2001, in press.
  7. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) The Orang-utans. Allen and Unwin, St Leonards, pp. 185 (ISBN 1 86508 124 8). Also published by Perseus/Hellix Press, N.Y. (ISBN 0-7382-0290-8).
  8. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (2000) Song, Roars and Rituals: Communication in Birds, Mammals and Other Animals. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 207 (ISBN 0-674-00058-7)
  9. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2001) Birds: Their Habits and Skills, Allen & Unwin, Sydney (ISBN 1865083763)
  10. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan. (2003) Spirit of the Wild Dog: The World of Wolves, Coyotes, Jackals and Dingoes. Allen and Unwin, Sydney. (ISBN 1 86508 673 8).
  11. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2003) Gene Worship: Moving Beyond the Nature/Nurture Debate Over Genes, Brain, and Gender. OtherPress, New York.(ISBN 1-59051-034-8).

Edited Books

  1. Fagot, J., Rogers, L.J., Ward, J.P., Bulman-Fleming, B., and Hopkins, W. D. (eds) (1997) Hemispheric Specialisation in Animal and Humans: A Special Issue of laterality, Psychology Press, Hove, vol. 2, pp. 177-338 (ISBN 0-86377-964-6).
  2. Rogers, L.J. and Andrew, R.J. (eds) (2002) Comparative Vertebrate Lateralization. Cambridge University Press, N.Y., pp. 660 (ISBN 0521781612 Hbk, 0521787009).
  3. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (2004) Comparative Vertebrate Cognition: Are Primates Superior to Nonprimates? Kluwer, N.Y. (ISBN 0-306-47727-0).

Edited Journal Volumes

  1. Rogers, L.J. and Box, H. (eds) (1999) Exploration and Responses to Novelty in marmosets and tamarins. Papers from the XXVIIth Congress of the International Primatological Society. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, Vol. 12 (1), 1999.
  2. Rogers, L.J. and Box, H. (eds) (1999) Exploration and Responses to Novelty in marmosets and tamarins. Papers from the XXVIIth Congress of the International Primatological Society. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, Vol. 12 (2), 1999.
  3. Malashichev, Y.B. and Rogers, L.J. (eds) (2002) Behavioural and Morphological Asymmetries in Amphibians and Reptiles. Laterality, vol. 7, issue 3. pp. 195-229.

Refereed Reseach Papers and Reviews (from 1996)

  1. Bizazza, A., Cantalupo, C., Robins, A., Rogers, L.J. and Vallortigara, G. (1996) Right pawedness in toads. Nature, 379, 408.
  2. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (1996) Hand preferences and other lateral biases in rehabilitated orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus). Animal Behaviour, 51, 13-25.
  3. Astiningsih, K. and Rogers, L.J. (1996) Sensitivity to testosterone varies with strain, sex and site of action in chickens. Physiology and Behavior, 59, 1085-1092.
  4. Rogers, L.J. (1996) Behavioral, structural and neurochemical asymmetries in the avian brain: A model system for studying visual development and processing. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 20, 487-503.
  5. Rogers, L.J. and Krebs, G.A. (1996) Exposure to different wavelengths of light and the development of structural and functional asymmetries in the chicken. Behavioural Brain Research, 80, 65-73.
  6. Burne, T.H.J. and Rogers, L.J. (1996) Responses to odorants by domestic chicks. Physiology and Behavior, 60, 1441-1447.
  7. Hook-Costigan, M.A. and Rogers, L.J. (1996) Hand preferences in New World primates. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 9, 173-207. 
  8. Bizazza, A., Cantalupo, C., Robins, A., Rogers, L.J. and Vallortigara, G. (1997) Pawedness and motor asymmetries in toads. Laterality, 2, 49-64.
  9. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (1997) Differential contributions of the two visual pathways to functional lateralization in chicks. Behavioural Brain Research, 87, 173-182.
  10. Rogers, L.J. (1997) Early experiential effects on laterality: Research on chicks has relevance to other species. Laterality, 2, 199-219.
  11. Parsons, C.H. and Rogers, L.J. (1997) Pharmacological extension of the sensitive period for imprinting in Gallus domesticus. Physiology and Behavior, 62, 1303-1310.
  12. Burne, T.H.J. and Rogers, L.J. (1997) Relative importance of odour and taste in the one-trial passive avoidance learning bead task. Physiology and Behavior, 62, 1299-1302.
  13. Johnston, A.N.B., Bourne, R.C., Stewart, M.G., Rogers, L.J. and Rose, S.P.R. (1997) Exposure to light prior to hatching induces asymmetry of receptor binding in specific regions of the chick forebrain. Brain Research, 103, 83-90.
  14. Khyentse, M.D. and Rogers, L.J. (1997) Glutamate affects the development of the thalamofugal visual projections of the chick. Neuroscience Letters, 230, 65-68. 
  15. Robins, A., Lipollis, G., Bisazza, A., Vallortigara, G. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Lateralization of agonistic responses and hind-limb use in toads. Animal Behaviour, 56, 875-881.
  16. Bisazza, A., Rogers, L.J. and Vallortigara, G. (1998) The origins of cerebral asymmetry: A review of evidence of behavioral and brain lateralization in fishes, reptiles and amphibians. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 22, 411-426.
  17. Rogers, L.J. (1998) Indirect influences of gondal hormones on sexual differentiation. Behavioral Brain Sciences, 21, 337-338.
  18. Hook-Costigan, M.A. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Eye preferences in common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus): Influence of age, stimulus and hand preference. Laterality, 3, 109-130.
  19. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (1998) Teat preference for suckling in common marmosets: relationship to side of being carried and hand preference. Laterality, 3, 269-281.
  20. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Organisation of the tecto-rotundal and SP/IPS-rotundal projections in the chick. Journal of Comparative Neurology, 394, 171-185.
  21. Scanlan, J. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Ingestive and vocal mechanisms in birds: a parallel? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 21, 528-529.
  22. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Bilaterally projecting neurones in the two visual pathways of chicks. Brain Research, 794, 281-290.
  23. Johnston, A.N.B. and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Right hemisphere involvement in imprinting memory revealed by glutamate treatment. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behaviour, 60, 863-871.
  24. Rogers, L.J., Andrew, R.J. and Burne, T.H.J. (1998) Light exposure of the embryo and development of behavioural lateralisation in chicks: I. Olfactory responses. Behavioural Brain Research, 97, 195-200. 
  25. Hook-Costigan and Rogers, L.J. (1998) Lateralized use of the mouth in production of vocalizations by marmosets. Neuropsychologia, 36, 1265-1273. 
  26. Vallortigara, G., Rogers, L.J., Bisazza, A., Lippolis, G. and Robins, A. (1998) Complementary right and left hemifield use for predatory and agonistic behavior. Neuroreport, 9, 3341-3344.
  27. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Parental care in the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus jacchus): Development and effect of anogenital licking on exploration. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 113, 269-276.
  28. Rogers, L.J. and Deng, C. (1999) Light experience and lateralization of the two visual pathways in the chick. Behavioural Brain Research, 98, 277-287.
  29. Cameron, R. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Hand preference of the common marmoset, problem solving and responses in a novel setting. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 113, 149-157.
  30. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Differential sensitivities of the two visual pathways of the chick to labelling by fluorescent retrograde tracers. Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 89, 75-86. 
  31. Burne, T.H.J. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Changes in olfactory responsiveness by the domestic chick following early exposure to odorants. Animal Behaviour, 58, 329-336.
  32. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Parental care and exploration in the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 12, 21-34.
  33. Rogers, L.J. (1999) Factors influencing exploration in marmosets: age, sex and hand preference. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 12, 93-109.
  34. Vallortigara, G., Rogers, L.J. and Bisazza, A. (1999) Possible evolutionary origins of cognitive brain lateralization. Brain Research Reviews, 30, 164-175. 
  35. Johnston, A.N.B. and Rogers, L.J. (1999) Light exposure of chick embryo influences lateralized recall of imprinting memory. Behavioral Neuroscience, 113, 1267-1273.
  36. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2000) Organization of intratelencephalic projections to the visual Wulst of the chick. Brain Research, 856, 152-162.  
  37. Parsons, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2000) NMDA receptor antagonists extend the sensitive period for imprinting. Physiology and Behaviour, 68, 749-753.
  38. Rogers, L.J. (2000) Evolution of hemispheric specialisation: Advantages and disadvantages. Brain and Language, 73, 236-253.
  39. Hook, M.A. and Rogers, l.J. (2000) Development of hand preferences in marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) and effects of ageing. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 114, 263-271.
  40. Vallortigara, G., Cozzutti, C., Tommasi, L. and Rogers, L.J. (2001) How birds use their eyes: Opposite left-right specialisation for the lateral and frontal visual hemifield in the domestic chick. Current Biology, 11, 29-33. 
  41. Rogers, L.J. (2001) Lateralization in vertebrates: Its early evolution, general pattern and development. Advances in the Study of Behaviour, P.J.B. Slater and T. Roper (eds), in press.
  42. Deng, C., Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2001) Similarity of song nuclei in male and female Australian magpies (Gymnorhina tibicen). Behavioural Brain Research, 123, 89-102.
  43. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Patterns of gazing in orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus). International Journal of Primatology, 23, 501-526.
  44. Hook, M.A. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Leading-limb preference in marmosets (Callithrix jacchus): Walking, leaping and landing? Laterality, 7, 145-162.
  45. Lippolis, G., Bisazza, A., Rogers, J. and Vallortigara, G. (2002) Lateralization of predator avoidance responses in three species of toads. Laterality, 7, 163-183. 
  46. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Social recognition and approach in the chick: Lateralization and effect of visual experience. Animal Behaviour, 63, 697-706.
  47. Rogers, L.J. (2002) Lateralized brain function in anurans: Comparison to lateralization in other species. Laterality, 7, 219-239.
  48. Robins, A. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Limb preference and skeletal asymmetry in the cane toad, Bufo marinus. Laterality, 7, 261-275.
  49. Burne, T.H.J. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Chemosensory input and lateralization of brain function in the domestic chick. Behavioural Brain Research, 133, 293-300.
  50. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Prehatching visual experience and lateralization of the visual Wulst. Behavioural Brain Research, 134, 375-385.
  51. Koshiba, M., Nakamura, S., Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2003) Light-dependent development of asymmetry in the ipsilateral and contralateral thalamofugal visual projections of the chick. Neuroscience Letters, 336, 81-84.
  52. Rogers, L.J. (2003) Extreme problems with essential differences. Cerebrum, 5, 88-96.
  53. Rogers, L.J. (2003) Seeking some right answers about right brain-left brain. Cerebrum, 55-68.
  54. Pines, M.K., Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2003) Behavioural changes and cortisol levels in common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus jacchus) during and after transition to outdoor enclosures. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Environmental Enrichment, Sydney, Australia, Nov.4-9th,  2001, pp. 83-92
  55. Cross, N., Pines, M.K. and Rogers, L.J. (2004) Saliva sampling to assess cortisol levels in unrestrained common marmosets and the effect of behavioral stress. American Journal of Primatology, 62, 107-114
  56. Robins, A. and Rogers, L.J. (2004) Lateralised prey catching responses in the toad (Bufo marinus): Analysis of complex visual stimuli. Animal Behaviour, 68, 567-575.
  57. Rogers, L.J., Zucca, P. and Vallortigara, G. (2004) Advantage of having a lateralized brain. Proceedings of the Royal Society London B – Biological Sciences, 271, S420-S422. Also FirstCite, Biology Letters, May 2004 (DOI 10.1098/rsbl.2004.0200).
  58. Andrew, R.J., Johnston, A.N.B., Robins, A. and Rogers, L.J. (2004) Light experience and the development of behavioural lateralization in chicks. II. Choice of familiar versus unfamiliar model social partner. Behavioural Brain Research, 155, 67-76.
  59. Cross, N. and Rogers (2004) Diurnal cycle in salivary cortisol levels in common marmosets. Developmental Psychobiology, 45(3), 134-139.
  60. McGreevy, P. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Laterality in horses I: Motor and sensory laterality in Thoroughbred horses. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, in press.
  61. Rogers, L.J. and Deng, C. (2005) Corticosterone treatment of the chick embryo affects light-stimulated development of the thalamofugal visual pathway. Behavioural Brain Research, in press.
  62. Freire, R. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Experience-induced modulation of the use of spatial information in the domestic chick. Animal Behaviour, in press (3/7/04).
  63. Lippolis, G., Westman, W., McAllan, B.M. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Lateralization of escape responses in the striped-faced dunnart, Sminthopsis macroura (Dasyuridae: Marsupalia). Laterality, in press.
  64. Pines, M.K., Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Use of horizontal and vertical climbing structures by captive common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus). Applied Animal Behaviour Science, in press.
  65. Vallortigara, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Survival with an asymmetrical brain: advantages and disadvantages of cerebral lateralization. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, in press.
  66. Vallortigara, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Forming an asymmetrical brain: Genes, environment and evolutionary stable strategies. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, in press.
  67. Rogers, L.J. (2005) Factors influencing development of lateralization. Cortex, in press.
  68. Dharmaretnam, M. and Rogers, L.J. (2005) Hemispheric specialization and dual processing in strongly versus weakly lateralized chicks. Behavioural Brain Research, in press.

Refereed Chapters in Books

  1. Rogers, L.J. and Bradshaw, J.L. (1996) Motor asymmetries in birds and nonprimate mammals. In: D. Elliott and E.A. Roy (eds.), Manual Asymmetries in Motor Performance, CRC Press, pp 3-31 (ISBN 0-8493-8999-2/96).
  2. Bradshaw, J.L. and Rogers, L.J. (1996) Tool use and the evolutionary development of manual asymmetry. In: D. Elliott and E.A. Roy (Eds.), Manual Asymmetries in Motor Performance, CRC Press, pp.33-54 (ISBN 0-8493-8999-2/96).
  3. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (1997) Orangutans. In: G. Greenberg and M. H. Haraway (eds.), Comparative Psychology: A Handbook, Garland Press, N.Y., pp. 465-472.
  4. Rogers, L.J. (1997) Why do we need to learn about animals? In: Brennan, A. and Einstein, R. (eds.) Animals in Education: Value, Responsibilities and Questions. ANZCCART, pp.1-7.
  5. Rogers, L.J. Orang-utans and other fauna. In A. Kaur and I. Metcalfe (Eds.) The Making of Malaysia. Methuen, pp. 47-68 (1997).
  6. Rogers, L.J. (1999) Effect of light exposure of eggs on posthatching behaviour of chickens. In: Adams, N. & Slotow, R. (eds), Making Rain for African Ornithology. Proceedings of the 22nd International Ornithological Congress 16-22 August 1998, Durban, Birdlife South Africa, Johannesburg, S46.2, 19pp.
  7. Rogers, L.J. (1999) Evolution of side biases: Motor versus sensory lateralization. In M.K. Manas, M.B. Bulman-Fleming and G. Tiwari (eds) Side-Bias: A Neuropsychological Perspective. Kluwer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands (ISBN 0-7923-6660-3), pp. 3-40.
  8. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2001) Race and gender fallacies. In M. Lederman and I. Bartsch (eds) The Gender and Science Reader. Routledge, N.Y., pp. 323-342. ISBN 0415213576 and ISBN 0415213584.
  9. Kaplan, G.T. and Rogers, L.J. (2000)  The definition of male and female: Biological reductionism and the sanctions of normality.  In: S. Gunew (ed.), Feminist Knowledge: Discourses of Definition. Taylor and Francis, London. (ISBN 415046998).
  10. Andrew, R.J. and Rogers, L.J.  (2002) The nature of lateralization in tetrapods. In L.J. Rogers and R.J. Andrew (eds) Comparative Vertebrate Lateralization. Cambridge University Press, N.Y., pp. 94-125. (ISBN 0521781612 Hbk, 0521787009 Pbk).
  11. Deng, C. and Rogers, L.J. (2002) Factors affecting the development of lateralization in chicks. In L.J. Rogers and R.J. Andrew (eds) Comparative Vertebrate Lateralization. Cambridge University Press, N.Y., pp. 206-246. (ISBN 0521781612 Hbk, 0521787009 Pbk).
  12. Rogers, L.J. (2002) Advantages and disadvantages of lateralization. In L.J. Rogers and R.J. Andrew (eds) Comparative Vertebrate Lateralization . Cambridge University Press, N.Y., pp. 126-153. (ISBN 0521781612 Hbk, 0521787009 Pbk).
  13. Rogers, L.J. (2002) Lateralization in vertebrates: Its early evolution, general pattern and development. Advances in the Study of Behavior, Vol. 31, ed. by P.J.B. Slater, J. Rosenblatt, C. Snowdon and T. Roper (eds), pp. 107-162. (ISBN 0-12-004531-1).
  14. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (2004) All animals are not equal: the interface between scientific knowledge and the legislation for animal rights? In C.R. Sunstein and M. C. Nussbaum (eds.) Animal Rights: Law and Policy. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 175-202. (ISBN 0195 15 217 4)
  15. Rogers, L.J. (2004) Increasing the brain’s capacity: the neocortex, new neurons and hemispheric specialization. In Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (eds) Comparative Vertebrate Cognition: Are Primates Superior to Nonprimates? Kluwer, N.Y., pp. 289-323.
  16. Rogers, L.J. (2004) Laterality. In M. Bekoff (ed.) Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior, vol. . Greenwood Press, Westport, pp. 695-700.
  17. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (2004) Charles Darwin (1809-1882). In M. Bekoff (ed.) Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior, vol. 2. Greenwood Press, Westport, pp. 471-479.
  18. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. (2005) An eye for a predator: Lateralization in birds, with particular reference to the Australian magpie. In Behavioral and Morphological Asymmetries in Vertebrates edited by Yegor Malashichev and Wallace Deckel and published by Landes Bioscience.
  19. Rogers, L.J. (2005) Cognitive and social advantages of having a lateralized brain. In Behavioral and Morphological Asymmetries in Vertebrates edited by Yegor Malashichev and Wallace Deckel and published by Landes Bioscience.
  20. Rogers, L.J. (2005) Lateralization in its many forms, and its evolution and development. In W.D. Hopkins (ed.)Hemispheric Specialization in Primates: Evolution of Hand, Mind and Brain. Kluwer Academic, N.Y., in press.

Publications prior to 1996

  1. Rogers, L.J. The nitrogen excretion of Chelodina longicollis under conditions of hydration and dehydration. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 18, 249-266 (1966).
  2. Kaplan, M.M. and Rogers, L.J. Separation of human serum-alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Lancet, Nov. 15, 1029-1031 (1969).

1972

 3. Andrew, R.J. and Rogers, L.J. Testosterone, search behaviour and persistence. Nature, 237, 343-346 (1972).
 4. Rogers, L.J. and Miles, F.A. Centrifugal control of the avian retina. V. Effects of lesions of the isthmo-optic nucleus on visual behaviour. Brain Research, 48, 147-156 (1972).

1974

5. Rogers, L.J. Persistence and search influenced by natural levels of androgens in young and adult chickens. Physiology and Behavior, 12, 197-204 (1974).
6. Rogers, L.J. The teaching of behavioural sciences in medicine. In Jones, K.V. (ed.). The Teaching of Behavioural Sciences in Medicine, Geigy Psychiatric Symposium, 3, 13-16 (1974).
7. Rogers, L.J. Drennen, H.D. and Mark, R.F. Inhibition of memory formation in the imprinting period: irreversible action of cycloheximide in young chickens. Brain Research, 79, 213-233 (1974).

1975

8. Rogers, L.J. Biology and Human Behaviour. In: J.Mercer (ed.) The Other Half: Women in Australian Society, Penguin, Australia, 33-47 (197

1976

9. Rogers, L.J. Male hormones and behaviour. In: B. Lloyd and J. Archer (eds), Exploring Sex Differences, Academic Press, pp 157-184 (1976).

1977

10. Rogers, L.J. Oettinger, R., Szer, J. and Mark, R.F. Separate chemical inhibitors of long-term and short-term memory: contrasting effects of cycloheximide, ouabain and ethacrynic acid on various learning tests in chickens. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London., A, 196, 171-195 (1977).

1978

11. Young, C.E. and Rogers, L.J. Effects of steroidal hormones on sexual, attack and search behavior in the isolated male chick. Hormones and Behavior, 10, 107-117 (1978).
12. Rogers, L.J. and Drennen, H.D. Cycloheximide interacts with visual input to produce permanent slowing of visual learning in chickens. Brain Research, 158, 479-482 (1978).
13. Rogers, L.J. and Anson, J.M. Cycloheximide produces attentional persistence and slowed learning in chickens. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 9, 734-740 (1978).

1979

14. Rogers, L.J. Menstruation. Australian Family Physcian, 8(8), 923-931 (1979).
15. Hambley, J.W. and Rogers, L.J. Retarded learning induced by amino acids in the neonatal chick. Neuroscience, 4,(5), 677-684 (1979).
16. Rogers, L.J. and Anson, J.M. Lateralisation of function in the chicken fore-brain. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 10, 679-686 (1979).

1980

17. Rogers, L.J. Functional lateralisation in the chicken fore-brain revealed by cycloheximide treatment. In Acta XVII Congressus Orthnithologici - Gesellschaft, Berlin, Vol. 1, pp. 653-659 (1980).
18. Howard, K.J., Rogers, L.J. and Boura, A.L.A. Functional lateralisation of the chicken fore-brain revealed by use of intracranial glutamate. Brain Research, 188, 369-382 (1980).
19. Sdraulig, R., Rogers, L.J. and Boura, A.L.A. Glutamate and specific perceptual input interact to cause retarded learning in chicks. Physiology and Behavior, 24, 493-500 (1980).
20. Rogers, L.J. Lateralisation in the Avian Brain. Bird Behaviour, 2, 1-12 (1980).

1981

21. Reymond, E. and Rogers, L.J. Diurnal variations in learning performance in chickens. Animal Behaviour, 29, 241-248 (1981).
22. Sanderson, C.A. and Rogers, L.J. 2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid causes behavioural effects in chickens at environmentally relevant doses. Science, 211, 593-595 (1981). 
23. Rogers, L.J. Environmental influences on brain lateralisation. The Behavioural and Brain Sciences, 4, (1), 35-36 (1981).
24. Reymond, E. and Rogers, L.J. Deprivation of the visual and tactile aspects of food important to learning and performance of an appetitive task by chicks. Behavioural and Neural Biology,31, 425-434 (1981).
25. Rogers, L.J. Biology: gender differentiation and sexual variation. In Grieve, N. and Grimshaw, P. (eds.) Feminist Perspectives: an Interdisciplinary Collection of Women's Studies, Oxford University Press, London & New York, 44-57 (1981).
26. Rogers, L.J. and McCulloch, H. Pair-bonding in the galah, Eolophus roseicapilla, Bird Behaviour, 3(3), 80-92 (1981).

1982

27. Rogers, L.J Teratological effects of glutamate on behaviour. Food Technology Australia, 34(5), 202-206, (1982).
28. Rogers, L.J. and Hambley, J.W. Specific and non-specific effects of neuro-excitatory amino acids on learning and other behaviours in the chicken. Behavioural Brain Research, 4, 1-18 (1982).
29. Rogers, L.J. & Sanderson, C.A. Reply to "Jumping chickens: Relevance to Hazard in Humans" by M.L. Leng. Science, 215, 1421-1422 (1982).
30. Rogers, L.J. Light experience and asymmetry of brain function in chickens. Nature, 297, 223-225 (1982).
31. Rogers, L.J. The ideology of medicine. In Rose, S. (ed.) Against Biological Determinism, Allison and Busby, London, 79-93 (1982).
32. Rogers, L.J. and Walsh, J. Short-comings of the psychomedical research of John Money and co-workers into sex differences in behavior: social and political implications. Sex Roles, 8, 269-281 (1982).

1983

33. Rogers, L.J. Hormonal theories for sex differences - politics disguised as science: a reply to Debold and Luria. Sex Roles, 9, 1109-1113 (1983).
34. Rogers, L.J. and Ehrlich, D. Asymmetry in the chicken fore-brain during development and a possible involvement of the supraoptic decussation. Neuroscience. Letters., 37, 123-127 (1983).
35. Crampton, M.A. and Rogers, L.J. Low doses of 2,4,5-T are behaviourally teratogenic to rats. Experientia, 39(18), 891-892 (1983).
36. Zappia, J.V. and Rogers, L.J. Light experience during development affects asymmetry of fore-brain function in chickens. Developmental Brain Research, 11, 93-106 (1983).
37. Rogers, L.J. Herbicides and the development of brain and behaviour: a study in behavioural toxicology. In Kidman. A.D., Tomkins, J.K., Morris, C.A. and Cooper, N.A. (eds). Molecular Pathology of Nerve & Muscle: Noxious Agents and Genetic Lesions, The Humana Press, pp. 267-281 (1983).

1984

38. Rogers, L.J. Pharmacology: Why drug prescription is on the increase. In Birke, L.A.I. and Silvertown, J. (eds.), More than the Parts: Biology and Politics, Pluto Press, London, 64-81 (1984).

1985

39. Sattayasai, J., Rogers, L.J. and Ehrlich, D. Sequential treatment with low doses of kainic acid alters sensitivity of retinal cell types. Neuroscience Letters., 54, 277-281 (1985).
40. Rogers, L.J., Zappia, J.V. and Bullock, S.P. Testosterone and eye-brain asymmetry for copulation in chickens. Experientia, 41, 1447-1449 (1985).
41. Rogers, L.J., Zappia, J.V. and Ehrlich, D. Visual deficits following intraocular treatment of chickens with glutamate and kainic acid, Neuroscience Letters., 57, 191-197 (1985).
42. Rogers, L.J. Effect of brain asymmetry on learning and feeding in chickens. Recent Advances in Animal Nutrition in Australia, UNE Press, paper No. 20 (1985).
43. Low, G., Rogers, L.J., Brumley, S and Ehrlich, D. Visual defects and retinotoxity caused by the naturally occurring anthelmintics, Embelia ribes and Haginia abyssinica. Journal of Applied Pharmacology and Toxicology, 81, 220-230 (1985).

1986

44. Rogers, L.J. Organisation of brain and behaviour in the chicken: the influence of nutrition on it and its effects on learning and feeding. Proceedings of the Poultry Husbandry Research Foundation Symposium, Sydney University, 64-73 (1986).
45. Bullock, S.P. and Rogers, L.J. Glutamate-induced asymmetry in the sexual and aggressive behaviour of young chickens. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 24, 549-554 (1986).
46. Rogers, L.J., Robinson, T. and Ehrlich, D. Role of the supraoptic decussation in the development of asymmetry of brain function in the chicken, Developmental Brain Research, 28, 33-39 (1986).
47. McMillan, D.A., Harrison, P.M., Rogers, L.J., Tong, N, McLean, A.J. Polypharmacy in an Australian teaching hospital - preliminary analysis of prevalence, elements and associations, Medical Journal of Australia, 145, 339-342 (1986).
48. Milland, J.A., King, R.G. and Rogers, L.J. Changes in aggressive behaviour and forebrain choline acetyl transferase activity in the chick following aluminium chloride administration. Asia PacificJournal of Pharmacology, 1, 105-110 (1986).
49. Rogers, L.J. Lateralisation of learning in chicks: a review. Advances in the Study of Behaviour, 16, 147-189. (1986).

1987

50. Rogers, L.J. The asymmetry of brain function. In: W.R. Albury and P. Slezak (eds), Dimensions of Cognitive Science, University of N.S.W. Press, pp.75-84 (1987).
51. Zappia, J.V. and Rogers, L.J. Sex differences and reversal of brain asymmetry by testosterone in chickens. Behavioural Brain Research, 23, 261-267 (1987).
52. Hambley, J.W. , Johnston, G.A.R. and Rogers, L.J., Blood pressure development in SHR and WKY rats: effect of neonatal MSG treatment and evidence for transient hypertension in WKY rats. Neuroscience Letters, 83, 190-194 (1987). 
53. Rogers, L.J. Free glutamate and aspartate in the diet: effects on the development of brain and behaviour, Recent Advances in Animal Nutrition in Australia, U.N.E. Press, pp. 163-168 (1987).
54. Kaplan, G.T. and Rogers, L.J. Die Faszination des Androgynen Die Gewißheit einer Illusion: Das Spiel mit den Geschlechtern. Das Argument, Berlin, 165, 677-687 (1987

1988

55. Rogers, L.J. and Sink, H.S. Transient asymmetry in the projections of the visual hyperstriatum of the chicken, and reversal of its direction by light exposure. Experimental Brian Research, 70, 378-384 (1988).
56. Rogers, L.J. Biology, the popular weapon: sex differences in cognitive function. In Crossing Boundaries (ed. B. Caine, E. Gross and M. de Lepervanche), Allen and Unwin, Australia, pp. 43-51 (1988).
57. Rogers, L.J., Sink, H.S. and Hambley, J.W. Exploration, fear and maze-learning in spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive rats. Behavioural and Neural Biology, 49, 222-233 (1988).
58. Rogers, L.J. The role of specific retinal cell types in the perception of movement. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2, 65-81 (1988).

1989

59. Adret, P. and Rogers, L.J. Sex difference in the visual projections of young chicks: a quantitative study of the thalamofugal pathway. Brain Research, 478, 59-73 (1989).
60. Rogers, L.J. The left and right of brains at work. New Scientist, no. 1651, pp. 56-59 (1989).
61. Rogers, L.J. and Andrew, R.J. Changes in the relative use of frontal and peripheral visual fields following treatment of chicks with testosterone. Animal Behaviour, 38, 394-405 (1989).
62. Rogers, L.J. and Workman, L. Light exposure during incubation affects competitive behaviour in domestic chicks. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 23, 187-198 (1989).
63. Rogers, L.J. and Bell, G.A. Different rates of functional development in the two visual systems of the chicken revealed by [14C] 2-deoxyglucose. Developmental Brain Research, 49, 161-172 (1989).
64. Rogers, L.J. Laterality in Animals, In: N.W. Bond and D.A.T. Siddle (Eds), Psychobiology: Issues and Applications, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., North Holland, pp.533-548 (1989).
65. Rogers, L.J. Laterality in animals. The International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 3, 5-25 (1989).

1990

66. Kaplan, G.T. and Rogers, L.J. The definition of male and female: biological reductionism and the sanctions of normality. In: S. Gunew (ed.), Feminist Knowledge: Discourses of Definition , Routledge, London, pp. 201-224 (1990).
67. Kaplan, G.T. and Rogers, L.J. Scientific constructions, cultural productions: scientific narratives of sexual attraction. In: T. Threadgold and A. Cranny-Francis (eds), Feminine, Masculine and Representation, Allen and Unwin, Sydney,pp. 211-230 (1990).
68. Workman, L. and Rogers, L.J. Pecking preferences in young chicks: the role of nutritive reward and the effects of beak-rimming. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 26, 115-126 (1990).
69. Bolden, S.W., Hambley, J.W., Johnston, G.A.R. and Rogers, L.J. Neonatal stress and long-term modulation of GABA receptors in rat brain. Neuroscience Letters, 111, 258-262(1990).
70. Rogers, L.J. Light input and the reversal of functional lateralization in the chicken brain, Behavioural Brain Research, 38, 211-221 (1990).
71. Webster, D., Steeves, J. Rogers, L.J. and Pettigrew, J. Origins of descending spinal pathways in prehensile birds: do parrots have a homologue to the corticospinal tract of mammals? Brain, Behaviour and Evolution, 36, 216-226 (1990)

1991

72. Rogers, L.J. and Bolden, S.W. Light-dependent development and asymmetry of visual projections. Neuroscience Letters, 121, 63-67 (1991).
73. Rogers, L.J. Development of Lateralisation. In R.J. Andrew (Ed.), Neural and Behavioural Plasticity, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp.507-535 (1991).
74. Rogers, L.J. and Astiningsih, K. Social hierarchies in very young chicks. British Poultry Science, 32, 47-56 (199

1992

75. Bullock, S .P. and Rogers, L.J. Specialization, dominance and interhemispheric transfer in the control of copulation in the young chick. Behavioural Brain Research, 48, 9-14 (1992).
76. Stewart, M.G., Rogers. L.J., Davies, H. and Bolden, S.W. Structural asymmetry in the thalamofugal visual projections in the 2-day-old chick is correlated with a hemispheric difference in synaptic number in the hyperstriatum accessorium. Brain Research, 585, 381-385 (1992).
77. Rogers, L.J. and Trémont, R. Animal welfare in Australia. New Scientist, No. 1821 (1992), p. 37.
78. Bell, G. A. and Rogers, L.J. Metabolic Activity in the hyperstriatum of 2-day-old chicks during optomotor and contrasting visual stimulation, Behavioural Brain Research, 50, 177-183 (1992).
79. Schwarz, I. M. and Rogers, L.J. Testosterone: A role in the development of brain asymmetry in the chick. Neuroscience Letters, 146, 167-170 (1992).

1993

80. Rajendra, S. and Rogers, L.J. Asymmetry is present in the thalamofugal projections of female chicks. Experimental Brain Research, 92, 542-544 (1993).
81. Rogers, L.J. and Rajendra, S. Modulation of the development of light-induced asymmetry in chick thalamofugal visual projections by estradiol. Experimental Brain Research, 93, 89-94 (1993).
82. Rogers, L.J. and Workman, L. Footedness in birds. Animal Behaviour, 45, 409-411(1993).
83. Rogers, L.J. and Adret, P. Developmental mechanisms of lateralization. In J-H. Bischoff and H. P. Zeigler (Eds) Vision, Brain, and Behavior in Birds, MIT Press, Cambridge,pp. 227-242 (1993)
84. Rogers, L.J., Stafford, D. and Ward, J.P. Head cocking in galagos. Animal Behaviour, 45, 943-952 (1993).
85. Rogers, L.J. The molecular neurobiology of early learning, development and sensitive periods, with emphasis on the avian brain. Molecular Neurobiology, 7, 161-187 (1993).
86. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. Köhler and tool use in orang-utans. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 6 (4), (1993).
87. Rogers, L.J. Sex differences in cognition: The new rise of biologism. The Australian Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 10, 2-5 (1993).
88. Johnston, A.N., Rogers, L.J. and Johnston, G.A.R. Glutamate and imprinting memory: the role of glutamate receptors in the encoding of imprinting memory. Behavioural Brain Research, 54, 137-143 (1993).
89. Parsons, C.H. and Rogers, L.J. Role of the tectal and posterior commissures in lateralization in the avian brain. Behavioural Brain Research, 54, 153-164 (1993).
90. Rogers, L.J., Bolden, S.W., Patrech, A.S. and Ehrlich, D. Visual dysfunction in spontaneously hypertensive rats. Physiology and Behavior, 54, 903-907 (1993).
91. Rogers, L.J., Adret, P. and Bolden, S.W. Organisation of the thalamofugal visual projections in chick embryos, and a sex difference in light-stimulated development. Experimental Brain Research, 97, 110-114 (1993).
92. Rogers, L.J. The Evolution and Development of Brain Asymmetry, and its Relevance to Language, Tool Use and Conciousness. Public Lecture, University of New England Press, pp.18 (1993).

1994

93. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. A new form of tool use by orang-utans in Sabah, East Malaysia, Folia Primatologica, 63, 50-52 (1994).
94. Rogers, L.J., Ward, J.P. and Stafford, D. Eye dominance in the small-eared bushbaby, Otolemur garnettii. Neuropsychologia, 32, 257-264 (1994).
95. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. Race and gender fallacies: The paucity of biological explanations of difference. In E. Tobach and B. Rosoff (Eds) Challenging Racism and Sexism: Alternatives to Genetic Explanations. Genes and Gender VII, The Feminist Press at the City University, New York, pp. 66-92 (1994).
96. Rogers, L.J. and Bell, G.A. Changes in metabolic activity in the hyperstriatum of the chick before and after hatching. International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience, 12 (6) 557-566 (1994).
97. Rogers, L.J. What do animals think and feel? ANZCCART Newsletter, 7(4), 1-3 (1994).
98. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. Handedness in orang-utans. In Ogden, J. and Rosen, N. (eds.) Proceedings of the International Conference on Orangutans: The Neglected Ape, Fullerton, CA, Zoological Society of San Diego, pp. 220-231(1994).
99. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. Rich imagery, neglected practice: the plight of the wild orang-utan in past and present. In Ogden, J. and Rosen, N. (eds.) Proceedings of the International Conference on Orangutans: The Neglected Ape, Fullerton, CA, Zoological Society of San Diego, pp. 57-65 (1994).

1995

100. Johnston, A.N., Rogers, L.J. and Dodd, P.R. [3H]MK-801 binding asymmetry in the IMHV region of dark-reared chicks is reversed by imprinting. Brain Research Bulletin, 37, 5-8 (1995).
101. Rogers, L.J. They are only animals. In L. Birke and R. Hubbard (Eds.), Reinventing Biology: Respect for Life and the Creation of Knowledge , Indiana University Press, Bloomington, pp.149-172 (1995).
102. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. Neglected apes: Orang-utans in Borneo. Australasian Science, 16 (2), 43-44 (1995)
103. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. Orang-utans in Borneo, Pelangi, 11 (4), 2-4 (1995).
104. Rogers, L.J. The evolution and development of brain asymmetry, and its relevance to language, tool use and consciousness. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 8(1), 1-15 (1995).
105. Rogers, L.J. Do animals think? In R.M. Baker, R. Einstein, D.J. Mellor and R.A. Rose (eds.) Animals and Science in the Twenty-first Century: New Technologies and Challenges. Proceedings of the Conference held at the Business School, University of Melbourne, 7-8 Oct. (1995), pp. 95-103.
106. Rogers, L.J. and Kaplan, G. Do animals think? Animals Today, 3, 8-10, 1995.
107. Burne, T.H.J. and Rogers, L.J. Odors, volatiles and approach-avoidance behavior of the domestic chick (Gallus gallus domesticus). International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 8(3), 99-114 (1995).
108. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. Of human fear and indifference: the plight of the orang-utan. In Nadler, R.D., Galdikas, B., Sheehan, L. and Rosen, N. (eds.) The Neglected Ape, Plenum Press, New York, pp.3-12 (1995) (ISBN 0306452138). 
109. Hook-Costigan, M.A. and Rogers, L.J. Lateralization of hand, mouth and eye use in the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), Folia Primatologica, 64, 180-191 (1995).

Poster Presentations


Survival with an Asymmetrical Brain

Eyes and communication in Orang-utans