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Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task

Unlike other animal species, domesticated pet dogs reliably use a range of human communicative cues to find a hidden reward in the object-choice task. One explanation for this finding is that dogs evolved skills for understanding human communicative behaviour during and as a result of human domestic...

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Autores principales: Osborne, Tara, Mulcahy, Nicholas John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6405081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30845205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213166
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author Osborne, Tara
Mulcahy, Nicholas John
author_facet Osborne, Tara
Mulcahy, Nicholas John
author_sort Osborne, Tara
collection PubMed
description Unlike other animal species, domesticated pet dogs reliably use a range of human communicative cues to find a hidden reward in the object-choice task. One explanation for this finding is that dogs evolved skills for understanding human communicative behaviour during and as a result of human domestication. However, contrary to this domestication hypothesis, Udell et al. found domesticated shelter dogs failed to locate a hidden reward using a human’s distal point cue, a cue pet dogs easily use. Hare et al., however, suggested the unorthodox methods used in Udell et al.’s object-choice task resulted in the shelter dogs failing to use human cues. In support of this, Hare et al. found that shelter dogs could use a human communicative pointing cue when tested with a standard object-choice task method. Yet in contrast to Udell et al., Hare at al. used a much simpler proximal cue that cannot exclude success based on stimulus enhancement rather than an understanding of the cue’s communicative nature. We therefore addressed this issue by testing shelter dogs’ abilities to use a range of proximal and distal human communicative cues in a standard object-choice task. We found shelter dogs could use proximal cues that may involve stimulus enhancement, but they continuously failed to use distal cues that excluded this possibility. Object-choice tasks with dogs typically involve non-vocalised human cues. We tested if vocalising would help shelter dogs to use distal cues. We found shelter dogs could use a vocalised distal continuous cue when the subject’s name was called during cue presentation. It is therefore possible that vocalised cues help domesticated dogs learn about non-vocalised human communicative cues. Overall our results do not support that domesticated dogs’ understanding of human communicative cues is a direct result of the domestication process.
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spelling pubmed-64050812019-03-17 Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task Osborne, Tara Mulcahy, Nicholas John PLoS One Research Article Unlike other animal species, domesticated pet dogs reliably use a range of human communicative cues to find a hidden reward in the object-choice task. One explanation for this finding is that dogs evolved skills for understanding human communicative behaviour during and as a result of human domestication. However, contrary to this domestication hypothesis, Udell et al. found domesticated shelter dogs failed to locate a hidden reward using a human’s distal point cue, a cue pet dogs easily use. Hare et al., however, suggested the unorthodox methods used in Udell et al.’s object-choice task resulted in the shelter dogs failing to use human cues. In support of this, Hare et al. found that shelter dogs could use a human communicative pointing cue when tested with a standard object-choice task method. Yet in contrast to Udell et al., Hare at al. used a much simpler proximal cue that cannot exclude success based on stimulus enhancement rather than an understanding of the cue’s communicative nature. We therefore addressed this issue by testing shelter dogs’ abilities to use a range of proximal and distal human communicative cues in a standard object-choice task. We found shelter dogs could use proximal cues that may involve stimulus enhancement, but they continuously failed to use distal cues that excluded this possibility. Object-choice tasks with dogs typically involve non-vocalised human cues. We tested if vocalising would help shelter dogs to use distal cues. We found shelter dogs could use a vocalised distal continuous cue when the subject’s name was called during cue presentation. It is therefore possible that vocalised cues help domesticated dogs learn about non-vocalised human communicative cues. Overall our results do not support that domesticated dogs’ understanding of human communicative cues is a direct result of the domestication process. Public Library of Science 2019-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6405081/ /pubmed/30845205 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213166 Text en © 2019 Osborne, Mulcahy http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Osborne, Tara
Mulcahy, Nicholas John
Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title_full Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title_fullStr Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title_full_unstemmed Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title_short Reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
title_sort reassessing shelter dogs’ use of human communicative cues in the standard object-choice task
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6405081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30845205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213166
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