Abstract

In humans, numerical estimation is affected by perceptual biases, such as those originating from the spatial arrangement of elements. Different animal species can also make relative quantity judgements. This includes dogs, who have been proposed as a good model for comparative neuroscience. However, dogs do not show the same perceptual biases observed in humans. Thus, the exact perceptual/cognitive mechanisms underlying quantity estimations in dogs and their degree of similarity with humans are still a matter of debate. Here we explored whether dogs are susceptible to the connectedness illusion, an illusion based on the tendency to underestimate the quantity of interconnected items. Dogs were first trained to choose the larger of two food arrays. Then, they were presented with two arrays containing the same quantity of food, of which one had items interconnected by lines. Dogs significantly selected the array with unconnected items, suggesting that, like in humans, connectedness determines underestimation biases, possibly disrupting the perceptual system’s ability to segment the display into discrete objects. The similarity in dogs’ and humans’ susceptibility to the connectedness, but not to other numerical illusions, suggests that different mechanisms are involved in the estimation of quantity of stimuli with different characteristics.

Highlights

  • Mathematical abilities are often considered some of the highest cognitive skills of our species

  • Humans overestimate a large group of centrally located items compared to items located in small groups in the perimeter to form smaller clusters in the solitaire i­llusion[22,23,24], whereas mixed result have been obtained from other s­ pecies[22,25,26,27]

  • It is the case of the connectedness illusion, a novel numerical illusion that caught the attention of researchers in the last ­decade[30,31,32]

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Summary

Introduction

Mathematical abilities are often considered some of the highest cognitive skills of our species. Both humans and rhesus macaques overestimate items in regularly arranged arrays compared to Scientific Reports | (2021) 11:23291. Given the mixed results of other numerical illusions in non-human animals, such as the solitaire illusion, researchers advanced the hypothesis that perceptual mechanisms associated with quantity estimation in human and nonhuman animals must be partially ­dissimilar[22,25,26,27]. Extending the investigation of the connectedness illusion to non-human animals would help us to deepen this issue and better define similarities and differences between human and non-human animals in the perception of numerosity, with the respect to the possibility to develop a proper animal model for the study of mathematical abilities in the near f­uture[39]

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