Abstract

Executive function plays a critical role in regulating behaviour. Behaviour which directs attention towards the correct solution leads to increased executive function performance in children, but it is unknown how other animals respond to such scaffolding behaviour. Dogs were presented with an A-not-B detour task. After learning to go through gap A to obtain the reward, the barrier was reversed, and the dogs had to inhibit their learned response and enter through gap B on the opposite side. Failure to do so is known as the perseveration error. In test trials, dogs taking part in one of two scaffolding conditions, a pointing condition, where the experimenter pointed to the new gap, and a demonstration condition, where the experimenter demonstrated the new route, were no less likely to commit the perseveration error than dogs in a control condition with no scaffolding behaviour. Dogs’ lack of responsiveness to scaffolding behaviour provides little support for suggestions that simple social learning mechanisms explains scaffolding behaviour in humans. Instead, our results suggest that the theory of natural pedagogy extends to the development of executive function in humans. This suggests that human children’s predisposition to interpret ostensive-communicative cues as informative may be an innate, species-specific adaptation.

Highlights

  • Executive function plays a critical role in regulating behaviour

  • Dogs in all three conditions were substantially more likely than chance to commit the perseveration error on the first trial (Control Condition: 9/10 dogs, Bayesian Binomial test: BF = 18.5; Pointing Condition: 9/10 dogs, Bayesian Binomial test: BF = 18.5; Demonstration Condition: 9/10 dogs, Bayesian Binomial test: BF = 18.5; Fig. 1) and whether the experimenter engaged in scaffolding behaviour or not had no effect on how likely the dogs were to initially move toward gap A (Pointing vs Control Bayesian contingency test: BF = 0.329; Demonstration vs Control Bayesian contingency test: BF = 0.329)

  • The scaffolding behaviour directed towards the dogs appeared to have no effect on whether they initially showed the perseveration error on the first trial or how likely they were to learn to avoid making the error across all four trials

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Summary

Introduction

Executive function plays a critical role in regulating behaviour. Behaviour which directs attention towards the correct solution leads to increased executive function performance in children, but it is unknown how other animals respond to such scaffolding behaviour. If scaffolding functions by re-directing infant attention, we would predict that scaffolding behaviour should lead to a similar improvement in dogs’ performance in an inhibitory control task due to their sensitivity to human ostensive-communication cues.

Results
Conclusion
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