Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.

Discrimination of and memory for others' generous and selfish behaviors could be adaptive abilities in social animals. Dogs have seemingly expressed such skills in both direct and indirect interactions with humans. However, recent studies suggest that their capacity may rely on cues other than...

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Main Authors: Fabricio Carballo, Esteban Freidin, Natalia Putrino, Carolina Shimabukuro, Emma Casanave, Mariana Bentosela
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116314
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spelling doaj-2323c9e9a422448180a3c85fa3d235b32021-06-19T04:51:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01102e011631410.1371/journal.pone.0116314Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.Fabricio CarballoEsteban FreidinNatalia PutrinoCarolina ShimabukuroEmma CasanaveMariana BentoselaDiscrimination of and memory for others' generous and selfish behaviors could be adaptive abilities in social animals. Dogs have seemingly expressed such skills in both direct and indirect interactions with humans. However, recent studies suggest that their capacity may rely on cues other than people's individual characteristics, such as the place where the person stands. Thus, the conditions under which dogs recognize individual humans when solving cooperative tasks still remains unclear. With the aim of contributing to this problem, we made dogs interact with two human experimenters, one generous (pointed towards the food, gave ostensive cues, and allowed the dog to eat it) and the other selfish (pointed towards the food, but ate it before the dog could have it). Then subjects could choose between them (studies 1-3). In study 1, dogs took several training trials to learn the discrimination between the generous and the selfish experimenters when both were of the same gender. In study 2, the discrimination was learned faster when the experimenters were of different gender as evidenced both by dogs' latencies to approach the bowl in training trials as well as by their choices in preference tests. Nevertheless, dogs did not get confused by gender when the experimenters were changed in between the training and the choice phase in study 3. We conclude that dogs spontaneously used human gender as a cue to discriminate between more and less cooperative experimenters. They also relied on some other personal feature which let them avoid being confused by gender when demonstrators were changed. We discuss these results in terms of dogs' ability to recognize individuals and the potential advantage of this skill for their lives in human environments.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116314
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabricio Carballo
Esteban Freidin
Natalia Putrino
Carolina Shimabukuro
Emma Casanave
Mariana Bentosela
spellingShingle Fabricio Carballo
Esteban Freidin
Natalia Putrino
Carolina Shimabukuro
Emma Casanave
Mariana Bentosela
Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Fabricio Carballo
Esteban Freidin
Natalia Putrino
Carolina Shimabukuro
Emma Casanave
Mariana Bentosela
author_sort Fabricio Carballo
title Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
title_short Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
title_full Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
title_fullStr Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
title_full_unstemmed Dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
title_sort dog's discrimination of human selfish and generous attitudes: the role of individual recognition, experience, and experimenters' gender.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Discrimination of and memory for others' generous and selfish behaviors could be adaptive abilities in social animals. Dogs have seemingly expressed such skills in both direct and indirect interactions with humans. However, recent studies suggest that their capacity may rely on cues other than people's individual characteristics, such as the place where the person stands. Thus, the conditions under which dogs recognize individual humans when solving cooperative tasks still remains unclear. With the aim of contributing to this problem, we made dogs interact with two human experimenters, one generous (pointed towards the food, gave ostensive cues, and allowed the dog to eat it) and the other selfish (pointed towards the food, but ate it before the dog could have it). Then subjects could choose between them (studies 1-3). In study 1, dogs took several training trials to learn the discrimination between the generous and the selfish experimenters when both were of the same gender. In study 2, the discrimination was learned faster when the experimenters were of different gender as evidenced both by dogs' latencies to approach the bowl in training trials as well as by their choices in preference tests. Nevertheless, dogs did not get confused by gender when the experimenters were changed in between the training and the choice phase in study 3. We conclude that dogs spontaneously used human gender as a cue to discriminate between more and less cooperative experimenters. They also relied on some other personal feature which let them avoid being confused by gender when demonstrators were changed. We discuss these results in terms of dogs' ability to recognize individuals and the potential advantage of this skill for their lives in human environments.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116314
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