BIBLIOGRAFIA 
The Journal of Animal Behavior.—Volumen IV. Números 1, 2,3,4,5 
y 6.—1914. H. HoLT ÁND ComPANY, New York. 
Contiene este volumen los siguientes trabajos: Rapid modification 
of the behavior of fishes by contact with modified water—V. E. Shelford 
and W.C. Allee; Modification of the behavior of land animals by contact 
with arr of high evaporating power—V. E. Shelford; A grafic method of 
recording maze-reactions—R. M. Yerkes and Ch. E. Kellogg; A circular 
maze with camera lucida attachment—J. B. Watson; Time versus distance 
in learnnng—H. B. Hubbert; On sound diserimination by cats—W. T. 
Shepherd; A note on the supposed, olfatory hunting-responses of the dog — 
H. M. Johnson (January-February).—Light discrimination in the 
English sparrow—E. F. Tugman; The role of random movements in the 
orientation of «Porcellio scaber» to light—MH. B. Torrey and G.P. Hays; 
Male doves reared in insolation—W. Craig; Hunter on the question of 
form-perception in animals —H. M. Johnson; A definition of form—H. 
C. Bingham; The auditory reactions of the dog studied by the Pawlow 
Method—S. Morgulis (March-April) .—Conspicuous flowers rarely visit- 
ed by insecis—J. H. Lovell; The Harvard Laboratory of Animal Psy- 
chology and the Franklyn Field Station—KR. M. Yerkes; The behavior 
of the crow, “Corvus Americanus Aud”»—Ch. A. Coburn; Some relations 
between rheotaxis and the rate of carbon dioxide production of isopods— 
W.C. Allee and S. Tashiro; The auditory sensitivity of the white rat— 
W. S. Hunter; Behavior of the Mediterranean fruit fly (Ceratitis capitata 
Wied) toward keroseene—H. P. and H. C. Severin (May-June).— 
The factors determining the vertical movements of Daphnia—L. R. Dice; 
Studies ef the physiology of reproduction in the domestic fowl. VII. Data 
regarding the brooding instinct in its relation to egg production—R. Pearl; 
On the thele-perception of sex in silleworm moths—0. Polimanti; A note 
on the persistence of an instinci—K. S. Lashley (July—-August).—A 
study of sexual tendencies in monkeys and baboons—G. V. Hamilton; 
Visual pattern—=diserimination in the vertebratzs Y Problems and. Methods. 
II Comparative visual acuity in the dog, the monkey and the chick—H. 
M. Johnson; Paulow?s theory of the function of the central nervous system 
and a digest of some of the more recent contributions to this subject from 
Pawlow's laboratory—S. Morgulis; The influence of white and black 
