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Psychology

Dr Joah Madden

Dr Joah Madden

Director of Research, Associate Professor

 J.R.Madden@exeter.ac.uk

 5122

 Washington Singer 120

 

Washington Singer Laboratories, University of Exeter, Perry Road, Prince of Wales Road, Exeter, EX4 4QG, UK


Overview

Joah Madden is an Associate Professor in the School of Psychology, working in the Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour

Office hours:

Monday 8:30-9:30

Tuesday 11:30-12:30

Career

Associate Professor at the University of Exeter (2014-present)

Senior Lecturer at the University of Exeter (2009-2014)

Lecturer at the University of Exeter (2007-2009)

Post-docs at the University of Cambridge with Nick Davies and Tim Clutton-Brock (2002-2007)

Research posts with the RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) (2001-2002)

Research post with the BTO (British Trust for Ornithology) (1997)

Links

Research group links

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Research

Research interests

Current Research Projects:

The Evolution of Cognition

How does natural selection and evolution act on underlying, general cognitive processes such as learning, memory or executive control, which shape specific behaviours in wild-living animals?

I tackle this question using a novel study system, the ring-necked pheasant Phasianus colchicus

1. How do individuals differ in their performance on psychometric tests?

2. What are the fitness consequences of such differences?

3. What factors affect the inheritance and expression of individual cognitive performance?

The evolution of cognition is one of the most important, yet poorly understood issues in modern biology. The field of comparative cognition has generated a wealth of research into the cognitive processes underpinning animal behaviour, yet the evolutionary forces that have driven and shaped these processes are poorly understood. To progress the field, we need to determine three things: First, do individuals differ in their cognitive performance (CP) such that selection has variation on which to act? Second, is an individual’s CP heritable, and how is its expression shaped by non-genetic factors? Third, does an individual’s CP predict their fitness by determining their survival or reproductive chances? Answers to each of these questions are all significant steps in themselves, and each individually deepens our understanding of the evolution of cognition, but the real strength of this project is that they can be addressed in synchrony in a single, free-living study system. This will permit a more robust framework in which to tackle the broad question of how cognitive performance may evolve that can then be applied to a broader set of taxa and conditions.

Why Pheasants? Large numbers of birds can be bred and reared under controlled conditions, probed with established psychometric tests proven on domestic chickens and released into the wild where their fates can be tracked and their wild behaviour observed both directly and remotely.

Previous Research Projects:

My PhD thesis “Sex, costs and bowerbird tastes” originated as classical study of behavioural ecology, testing a series of models of sexual selection, but introduced me to the range of influences, usually studied under the guise of Psychology, that determine and shape individual’s behaviour.

My work in cognition and learning in the wild has included a demonstration that complexity of sexual display relates to brain size, and that cognition may be an important factor in mechanisms of sexual display and mate choice. This can involve both visual and vocal displays I have explored how learning of male display traits may lead to inter-population ‘cultural’ differences. I conducted a series of experimental studies asking how young, including those of brood parasites, learn to produce attractive begging calls and respond to species specific alarm calls, and decide when to stop begging. My ongoing work on bowerbirds has had two strands focusing on learning and cognition. The first involves my testing mechanisms of learning of male sexual traits (social vs. trial and error) across a whole population using experimental manipulation and tracking contacts and spread over the population. The second focuses on quantifying individual variation across a suite of cognitive performances and relating this to fitness proxies. Data for both these sets of studies have been collected and are in the process of analysis and writing.

My work on social influences on behaviour started by considering simple dyadic factors in which an individuals’ signal, be they sexual or begging, can be modulated by the behaviour of others, including heterospecifics. I have extended this simplistic approach and helped develop new methods to probe the effects of polyadic interactions utilizing social network analysis. This has allowed me to describe in detail animal social networks and separate out genetic and behavioural mechanisms underlying their structure, and observe how network structure can explain transmission of infectious disease across groups. I have gone beyond simply describing networks, and have used the paradigm of SNA to allow me to perturb the networks and observed knock-on effects across groups as a whole, and to test how network structure may facilitate the origin and persistence of reciprocal cooperationA. I have used hormonal manipulations to demonstrate that a suite of prosocial behaviours in group living animals may have a single governing pathway.

My work on how developmental mechanisms determine behaviour is more recent, but draws on observations that I made of how sexual and begging signals were shaped early in life. I have been rearing pheasants under a range of different conditions for the first eight weeks of life, and then observing and testing how adult morphology and behaviour has been affected. Early life manipulations have focused on sex ratio and dietary complexity. Bias in sex ratio can affect adult patterns of female mate choice and copulation rates, modulated by differences in perinatal steroid hormone levels provoked by aggression early in life.  I also find that assays of individual’s behaviour early in life can predict their susceptibility to apparently un-targeted harvesting by humans. Preliminary analysis of the dietary complexity data suggest that foraging ability, dietary breadth, dietary conservatism and gut morphology may all be governed by diet early in life. This work has attracted interest and funding from the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust and I continue to develop projects in this area with them.

I adopt an integrative approach to research leading me to publish beyond my central interests, with work on classical behavioural ecology and conservation biology. This allows me to cross traditional research boundaries and draw together novel insights from disparate fields.

Research projects

My work has a strong applied element with current collaborations with:

The Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust - Work on early rearing effects on adult pheasant behaviour

Songbird Survival

- Work on individual differences in (corvid) predator behaviour

Research networks

External Collaborators:

UK

Prof Nick Davies, University of Cambridge

Prof Tim Clutton-Brock, University of Cambridge

International

Prof Anne Goldizen, University of Queensland
Prof John Endler, Deakin University
Prof Marta Manser, University of Zurich

Research grants

  • 2013 European Research Council
    The Evolution of Cognition
  • 2008 BBSRC
    The Role of the Social Environment in the Development of a Male's Sexual Signal
  • 2008 Royal Society
    Effects of Early Social Environment on Expression of Sexual Traits

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Publications

Journal articles

Madden JR, Van Horik JO (In Press). A problem with problem solving: motivational traits, but not cognition, predict success on novel operant foraging tasks. Animal Behaviour
Van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (In Press). A single factor explanation for associative learning performance on colour discrimination problems in Common Pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). Intelligence
Van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Laker PR, Madden JR (In Press). Intra-individual variation in performance on novel variants of similar tasks influences single factor explanations of general cognitive processes. Royal Society Open Science
Van Horik JO, Langley E, Whiteside M, Beardsworth C, Madden J (In Press). Pheasants learn five different binomial colour discriminations and retain these associations for at least 27 days. Animal Behaviour and Cognition
Madden JR, Buckley R, Ratcliffe S (2023). Large-scale correlations between gamebird release and management and animal biodiversity metrics in lowland Great Britain. Ecol Evol, 13(5). Abstract.  Author URL.
Heathcote RJP, Whiteside MA, Beardsworth CE, Van Horik JO, Laker PR, Toledo S, Orchan Y, Nathan R, Madden JR (2023). Spatial memory predicts home range size and predation risk in pheasants. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 7(3), 461-471.
Raymond S, Spencer M, Chadwick EA, Madden JR, Perkins SE (2023). The impact of the COVID-19 lockdowns on wildlife–vehicle collisions in the UK. Journal of Animal Ecology, 92(6), 1244-1255. Abstract.
Raby CL, Cusick JA, Fürtbauer I, Graham KE, Habig B, Hauber ME, Madden JR, Strauss AVH, Fernández-Juricic E (2022). An inclusive venue to discuss behavioural biology research: the first global Animal Behaviour Twitter Conference. Animal Behaviour, 187, 191-207.
Nathan R, Monk CT, Arlinghaus R, Adam T, Alós J, Assaf M, Baktoft H, Beardsworth CE, Bertram MG, Bijleveld AI, et al (2022). Big-data approaches lead to an increased understanding of the ecology of animal movement. Science, 375(6582). Abstract.  Author URL.
Knoch S, Whiteside MA, Madden J, Rose P, Fawcett T (2022). Hot-headed peckers: thermographic changes during aggression among juvenile pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 377, 20200442-20200442.
Perrins C, Buchanan G, Croxall J, Gray B, Sale R, Cranbrook, Madden JR (2021). Book reviews. Ibis, 163(2), 737-744.
Pacheco XP, Madden JR (2021). Does the social network structure of wild animal populations differ from that of animals in captivity?. Behav Processes, 190 Abstract.  Author URL.
Capstick LA, Madden JR (2021). Factors predicting susceptibility of songbirds to nest predation by corvids. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH, 67(6).  Author URL.
Madden JR (2021). How many gamebirds are released in the UK each year?. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 67(4). Abstract.
Beardsworth CE, Whiteside MA, Laker PR, Nathan R, Orchan Y, Toledo S, van Horik JO, Madden JR (2021). Is habitat selection in the wild shaped by individual‐level cognitive biases in orientation strategy?. Ecology Letters, 24(4), 751-760. Abstract.
Raby CL, Madden JR (2021). Moving academic conferences online: Aids and barriers to delegate participation. Ecology and Evolution, 11(8), 3646-3655. Abstract.
Raby CL, Madden JR (2021). Moving academic conferences online: Understanding patterns of delegate engagement. ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 11(8), 3607-3615.  Author URL.
Beardsworth CE, Whiteside MA, Capstick LA, Laker PR, Langley EJG, Nathan R, Orchan Y, Toledo S, van Horik JO, Madden JR, et al (2021). Spatial cognitive ability is associated with transitory movement speed but not straightness during the early stages of exploration. Royal Society Open Science, 8(3). Abstract.
Hall A, Sage RA, Madden JR (2021). The effects of released pheasants on invertebrate populations in and around woodland release sites. ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 11(19), 13559-13569.  Author URL.
Laker PR, Hoppitt W, Weiss M, Madden JR (2021). The modularity of a social group does not affect the transmission speed of a novel, socially learned behaviour, or the formation of local variants. Proc Biol Sci, 288(1947). Abstract.  Author URL.
Langley EJG, van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Beardsworth CE, Weiss MN, Madden JR (2020). Early-life learning ability predicts adult social structure, with potential implications for fitness outcomes in the wild. J Anim Ecol, 89(6), 1340-1349. Abstract.  Author URL.
Langley EJG, Adams G, Beardsworth CE, Dawson DA, Laker PR, van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Wilson AJ, Madden JR (2020). Heritability and correlations among learning and inhibitory control traits. Behavioral Ecology, 31(3), 798-806. Abstract.
Whiteside MA, Bess MM, Frasnelli E, Beardsworth CE, Langley EJG, van Horik JO, Madden JR (2020). No evidence that footedness in pheasants influences cognitive performance in tasks assessing colour discrimination and spatial ability. Learning and Behavior, 48(1), 84-95. Abstract.
van Horik JO, Beardsworth CE, Laker PR, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2020). Response learning confounds assays of inhibitory control on detour tasks. Anim Cogn, 23(1), 215-225. Abstract.  Author URL.
Sage RB, Hoodless AN, Woodburn MIA, Draycott RAH, Madden JR, Sotherton NW (2020). Summary review and synthesis: effects on habitats and wildlife of the release and management of pheasants and red-legged partridges on UK lowland shoots. WILDLIFE BIOLOGY, 2020(4).  Author URL.
Griffin KR, Beardsworth CE, Laker PR, van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2020). The inhibitory control of pheasants (Phasianus colchicus) weakens when previously learned environmental information becomes unpredictable. Animal Cognition, 23(1), 189-202. Abstract.
Madden JR, Santilli F, Whiteside MA (2020). The welfare of game birds destined for release into the wild: a balance between early life care and preparation for future natural hazards. Animal Welfare, 29(1), 1-18. Abstract.
Whiteside MA, van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Beardsworth CE, Capstick LA, Madden JR (2019). Patterns of association at feeder stations for Common Pheasants released into the wild: sexual segregation by space and time. Ibis, 161(2), 325-336. Abstract.
Capstick LA, Sage RB, Madden JR (2019). Predation of artificial nests in UK farmland by magpies (Pica pica): interacting environmental, temporal, and social factors influence a nest's risk. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH, 65(3).  Author URL.
van Horik JO, Beardsworth CE, Laker PR, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2019). Unpredictable environments enhance inhibitory control in pheasants. Anim Cogn, 22(6), 1105-1114. Abstract.  Author URL.
van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Laker PR, Beardsworth CE, Madden JR (2018). Do detour tasks provide accurate assays of inhibitory control?. Proc Biol Sci, 285(1875). Abstract.  Author URL.
Langley EJG, Van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2018). Group social rank is associated with performance on a spatial learning task. Royal Society Open Science, 5(2). Abstract.
Langley EJG, van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2018). Individuals in larger groups are more successful on spatial discrimination tasks. Animal Behaviour, 142, 87-93. Abstract.
van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Laker PR, Madden JR (2018). Intra-individual variation in performance on novel variants of similar tasks influences single factor explanations of general cognitive processes. ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 5(7).  Author URL.
Whiteside MA, Bess MM, Frasnelli E, Beardsworth CE, Langley EJG, von Horik JO, Madden JR (2018). Low survival of strongly footed pheasants may explain constraints on lateralization. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 8  Author URL.
Whiteside MA, Bess MM, Frasnelli E, Beardsworth CE, Langley EJG, van Horik JO, Madden JR (2018). Low survival of strongly footed pheasants may explain constraints on lateralization. Sci Rep, 8(1). Abstract.  Author URL.
Boogert NJ, Madden JR, Morand-Ferron J, Thornton A (2018). Measuring and understanding individual differences in cognition. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci, 373(1756). Abstract.  Author URL.
Whiteside MA, Van Horik J, Langley E, Beardsworth C, Madden J (2018). Size dimorphism and sexual segregation in pheasants: tests of three competing hypotheses. PeerJ
Madden JR, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Beardsworth CE, van Horik JO (2018). The quick are the dead: pheasants that are slow to reverse a learned association survive for longer in the wild. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci, 373(1756). Abstract.  Author URL.
Langley EJG, van Horik JO, Whiteside MA, Beardsworth CE, Madden JR (2018). The relationship between social rank and spatial learning in pheasants, Phasianus colchicus: cause or consequence?. PeerJ, 6 Abstract.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Hall A, Whiteside MA (2018). Why do many pheasants released in the UK die, and how can we best reduce their natural mortality?. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH, 64(4).  Author URL.
Valletta J, Torney C, Kings M, Thornton A, Madden J (2017). Applications of machine learning in animal behaviour studies. Animal Behaviour
Whiteside MA, van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Beardsworth CE, Laker PR, Madden JR (2017). Differences in social preference between the sexes during ontogeny drive segregation in a precocial species. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 71
van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Whiteside MA, Madden JR (2017). Differential participation in cognitive tests is driven by personality, sex, body condition and experience. Behavioural Processes, 134, 22-30.
Whiteside MA, van Horik JO, Langley EJG, Beardsworth CE, Laker PR, Madden JR (2017). Erratum to: Differences in social preference between the sexes during ontogeny drive segregation in a precocial species (Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 10.1007/s00265-017-2332-2). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 71(8). Abstract.
Madden JR, Perkins SE (2017). Why did the pheasant cross the road? Long-term road mortality patterns in relation to management changes. Royal Society Open Science, 4(10). Abstract.
Madden JR (2016). Bird brain: an exploration of avian intelligence, By Nathan Emery. Lewes, U.K.: Ivy Press (2016). Pp.192. Price £20 hardback. Animal Behaviour, 120, 41-42.
Whiteside MA, Langley EJG, Madden JR (2016). Males and females differentially adjust vigilance levels as group size increases: effect on optimal group size. Animal Behaviour, 118, 11-18. Abstract.
Whiteside MA, Sage R, Madden JR (2016). Multiple behavioural, morphological and cognitive developmental changes arise from a single alteration to early life spatial environment, resulting in fitness consequences for released pheasants. Royal Society Open Science, 3(3). Abstract.
Taylor S, Madden J (2016). The Effect of Pet Remedy on the Behaviour of the Domestic Dog (Canis familiaris). Animals (Basel), 6(11). Abstract.  Author URL.
Whiteside MA, Sage R, Madden JR (2015). Diet complexity in early life affects survival in released pheasants by altering foraging efficiency, food choice, handling skills and gut morphology. J Anim Ecol, 84(6), 1480-1489. Abstract.  Author URL.
Gordon DS, Madden JR, Lea SEG (2014). Both loved and feared: third party punishers are viewed as formidable and likeable, but these reputational benefits may only be open to dominant individuals. PLoS One, 9(10). Abstract.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Whiteside MA (2014). Selection on behavioural traits during 'unselective' harvesting means that shy pheasants better survive a hunting season. Animal Behaviour, 87(C), 129-135. Abstract.
Thornton A, Isden J, Madden JR (2014). Toward wild psychometrics: Linking individual cognitive differences to fitness. Behavioral Ecology, 25(6), 1299-1301. Abstract.
Isden J, Panayi C, Dingle C, Madden J (2013). Performance in cognitive and problem-solving tasks in male spotted bowerbirds does not correlate with mating success. Animal Behaviour
Isden J, Panayi C, Dingle C, Madden J (2013). Performance in cognitive and problem-solving tasks in male spotted bowerbirds does not correlate with mating success. Animal Behaviour, 86(4), 829-838. Abstract.
Boyland NK, James R, Mlynski DT, Madden JR, Croft DP (2013). Spatial proximity loggers for recording animal social networks: Consequences of inter-logger variation in performance. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 67(11), 1877-1890. Abstract.
Boyland NK, James R, Mlynski DT, Madden JR, Croft DP (2013). Spatial proximity loggers for recording animal social networks: consequences of inter-logger variation in performance. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1-14.
Madden JR, Whiteside MA (2013). Variation in female mate choice and mating success is affected by sex ratio experienced during early life. Animal Behaviour
Madden JR, Whiteside MA (2013). Variation in female mate choice and mating success is affected by sex ratio experienced during early life. Animal Behaviour, 86(1), 139-142. Abstract.
Allcorn RI, Hilton GM, Fenton C, Atkinson PW, Bowden CGR, Gray GAL, Hulme M, Madden J, Mackley EK, Oppel S, et al (2012). Demography and breeding ecology of the critically endangered Montserrat Oriole. Condor, 114(1), 227-235. Abstract.
Madden JR, Nielsen JF, Clutton-Brock TH (2012). Do networks of social interactions reflect patterns of kinship?. CURRENT ZOOLOGY, 58(2), 319-328.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Dingle C, Isden J, Sparfeld J, Goldizen AW, Endler JA (2012). Male spotted bowerbirds propagate fruit for use in their sexual display. Curr Biol, 22(8), R264-R265.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Isden J, Dingle C (2011). Commentary on review by Boogert et al.: Some problems facing females. Behavioral Ecology, 22(3), 461-462.
Madden JR, Clutton-Brock TH (2011). Experimental peripheral administration of oxytocin elevates a suite of cooperative behaviours in a wild social mammal. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 278(1709), 1189-1194. Abstract.
Madden JR, Clutton-Brock TH (2011). Experimental peripheral administration of oxytocin elevates a suite of cooperative behaviours in a wild social mammal. Proc Biol Sci, 278(1709), 1189-1194. Abstract.  Author URL.
Croft DP, Madden J, Franks D, James R (2011). Hypothesis testing in animal social networks. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 26, 502-507.
Drewe JA, Eames KTD, Madden JR, Pearce GP (2011). Integrating contact network structure into tuberculosis epidemiology in meerkats in South Africa: Implications for control. Prev Vet Med, 101(1-2), 113-120. Abstract.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Drewe JA, Pearce GP, Clutton-Brock TH (2011). The social network structure of a wild meerkat population: 3. Position of individuals within networks. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 65(10), 1857-1871. Abstract.
Madden JR, Kunc HP, English S, Manser MB, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Calling in the gap: Competition or cooperation in littermates' begging behaviour?. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 276(1660), 1255-1262. Abstract.
Madden JR, Kunc HP, English S, Manser MB, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Calling in the gap: competition or cooperation in littermates' begging behaviour?. Proc Biol Sci, 276(1660), 1255-1262. Abstract.  Author URL.
Madden JR, Kunc HJP, English S, Manser MB, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Do meerkat (Suricata suricatta) pups exhibit strategic begging behaviour and so exploit adults that feed at relatively high rates?. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 63(9), 1259-1268. Abstract.
Madden JR, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Manipulating grooming by decreasing ectoparasite load causes unpredicted changes in antagonism. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 276(1660), 1263-1268. Abstract.
Madden JR, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Manipulating grooming by decreasing ectoparasite load causes unpredicted changes in antagonism. Proc Biol Sci, 276(1660), 1263-1268. Abstract.
Drewe JA, Madden JR, Pearce GP (2009). The social network structure of a wild meerkat population: 1. Inter-group interactions. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 63(9), 1295-1306. Abstract.
Madden JR, Drewe JA, Pearce GP, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). The social network structure of a wild meerkat population: 2. Intragroup interactions. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 64(1), 81-95. Abstract.
Madden JR, Kunc HJP, English S, Clutton-Brock TH (2009). Why do meerkat pups stop begging?. Animal Behaviour, 78(1), 85-89. Abstract.
Madden, J.R. (2008). Can bowerbirds be considered to exhibit recognizable cultures?. Animal Cognition, 11, 1-12.
Madden JR (2008). Do bowerbirds exhibit cultures?. Anim Cogn, 11(1), 1-12. Abstract.  Author URL.
English S, Kunc HP, Madden JR, Clutton-Brock TH (2008). Sex differences in responsiveness to begging in a cooperative mammal. Biol Lett, 4(4), 334-337. Abstract.  Author URL.
Manser MB, Madden JR, Kunc HP, English S, Clutton-Brock T (2008). Signals of need in a cooperatively breeding mammal with mobile offspring. Animal Behaviour, 76(6), 1805-1813. Abstract.
Kelley LA, Coe RL, Madden JR, Healy SD (2008). Vocal mimicry in songbirds. Animal Behaviour, 76(3), 521-528. Abstract.
Madden JR (2007). Innovation in sexual display. BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 30(4), 417-+.  Author URL.
Davies NB, Madden JR, Butchart SHM, Rutila J (2006). A host-race of the cuckoo Cuculus canorus with nestlings attuned to the parental alarm calls of the host species. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 273(1587), 693-699. Abstract.
Kunc, H. Madden, J.R. & Manser, M. (2006). Begging signals in a mobile feeding system: the evolution of different call types. American Naturalist, 170, 617-624.
Madden, J. R. (2006). Innovation in sexual display. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 301, 417-418.
Madden, J.R. & Davies, N.B. (2005). A host-race difference in begging calls of nestling cuckoos Cuculus canorus develops through experience and increases host provisioning. Proc R Soc London, B 273, 2343-2351.
Davies, N.B. Madden, J.R. Butchart, S.H.M. & Rutila, J. (2005). A host-race of the cuckoo Cuculus canorus with nestlings attuned to the parental alarm calls of the host species. Proc R Soc London, B 273, 693-699.
Endler JA, Madden JR, Robson T, Westcott DA (2005). Animal visual systems and the evolution of color patterns; sensory processing illuminates signal evolution. Evolution, 59(8), 1795-1818.
Madden, J.R. (2005). Inter-population differences exhibited by Spotted Bowerbirds Chlamydera maculata across a suite of male traits and female preferences. Ibis, 148, 425-435.
JMadden, Hauber ME, Kilner RM (2004). Brood parasitic cowbird nestlings use host young to procure  resources. Science, 305(5685), 877-879.
Madden JR, Lowe TJ, Fuller HV, Dasmahapatra KK, Coe RL (2004). Local traditions of bower decoration by spotted bowerbirds in a single population. Animal Behaviour, 68(4), 759-765. Abstract.
Madden JR, Lowe TJ, Fuller HV, Coe RL, Dasmahapatra KK, Amos W, Jury F (2004). Neighbouring male spotted bowerbirds are not related, but do maraud each other. Animal Behaviour, 68(4), 751-758. Abstract.
Kilner, R.M. Davies, N.B. (2004). Nestling responses to adult food and alarm calls: 1. Species-specific responses in two cowbird hosts. Animal Behaviour, 70, 619-627.
Madden, J.R. Kilner, R.M. & Davies, N.B. (2004). Nestling responses to adult food and alarm calls: 2. Cowbirds and red-winged blackbirds reared by eastern phoebe hosts. Animal Behaviour, 70, 629-637.
Madden JR, Balmford A (2004). Spotted bowerbirds <i>Chlamydera maculata</i> do not prefer rare or costly bower decorations. BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 55(6), 589-595.  Author URL.
Madden JR (2003). Bower decorations are good predictors of mating success in the spotted bowerbird. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 53(5), 269-277. Abstract.
Madden, J.R. (2003). Bower decorations are good predictors of mating success in the spotted bowerbird. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 53, 269-277.
Madden, J.R. Butchart, S.H.M. (2003). Learning fine-tunes a specific response of nestlings to the parental alarms of their own species. Proc R Soc London, B 271, 2297-2304.
Madden, J.R. Lowe, T.J. Fuller, H.V. Dasmahapatra, K. & Coe R.L. (2003). Local traditions of bower decoration by spotted bowerbirds in a single population. Animal Behaviour, 68, 559-565.
Madden, J.R. Endler, J.A. & Jury, F. (2003). Morphological signals of sex and status in spotted bowerbirds. Emu, 104, 21-30.
Madden, J.R. Lowe, T. J. Fuller, H. V. Coe R. L. Dasmahapatra, K. Amos, W. & Jury, F. (2003). Neighbouring male spotted bowerbirds are not related, but do maraud each other. Animal Behaviour, 68, 551-558.
JMadden, Tanner K (2003). Preferences for coloured bower decorations can be explained in a non-sexual context. Animal Behaviour, 65(6), 1077-1083.
Madden, J.R. & Balmford, A. (2003). Spotted bowerbirds do not prefer rare or costly bower decorations. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 55, 589-595.
Jenkins, M. Green, R.E. & Madden, J. (2002).  the Challenge of Measuring Global Change in Wild Nature: Are Things Getting Better or Worse?. Conservation Biology, 17, 20-23.
JMadden (2002). Bower decorations attract females but provoke other male spotted bowerbirds - bower owners resolve this trade-off. Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences, 269(1498), 1347-1351.
Balmford A, Bruner A, Cooper P, Costanza R, Farber S, Green RE, Jenkins M, Jefferiss P, Jessamy V, Madden J, et al (2002). Ecology: Economic reasons for conserving wild nature. Science, 297(5583), 950-953. Abstract.
Madden, J.R. (2002). Male spotted bowerbirds preferentially choose, arrange and proffer objects that are good predictors of mating success. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 53, 263-268.
Madden, J.R. (2001). Bower location by the spotted bowerbird Chlamydera maculata. Emu, 102, 187-193.
Bruner, A. Cooper, P. Costanza, R. (2001). Economic reasons for conserving wild nature. Science, 297, 950-953.
Madden J (2001). Sex, bowers and brains. Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences, 268(1469), 833-838.

Conferences

Madden JR (2017). Individual differences in cognitive performance as a consequence of natural selection, constraints and trade-offs. Abstract.

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External Engagement and Impact

Editorial responsibilities

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Teaching

Seminar Leader: PSY3423 The Evolution of Social and Organisational Behaviour

Module co-leader: PSY2217 Wild Behaviour

BSc Project Supervisor in Animal Cognition and Animal Social Behaviour themes

MSc Project Supervisor

Modules

2023/24

Information not currently available


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Supervision / Group

Postgraduate researchers

  • Christine Beardsworth Bird brains? Understanding how individual cognitive performance relates to movement ecology, in pheasants
  • Lucy Capstick The role of individual identity in (corvid) predation impact
  • Andy Hall Factors improving the survival and breeding of wild pheasants
  • Ellis Langley Pheasant Ecology and Cognition
  • Xareni Pacheco Social networks in captive animals

Alumni

  • Sinead English University of Cambridge
  • Holly Farmer Paignton Zoo
  • David Gordon University of Jyväskylä
  • Jess Isden Elephants for Africa
  • Mark Whiteside University of Exeter

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