Abstract

Simple SummaryThe ability to perceive other individuals’ emotions plays a central role for animals living in social groups. Cats entertain social relationships with individuals of the same species (conspecifics) as well as with humans (heterospecifics). Although previous studies have demonstrated that cats are sensitive to conspecific and human communicative signals, their perception of these species’ emotions hasn’t been extensively investigated. In the light of this, the aim of the present work was to investigate cats’ ability to recognize conspecific and human emotions. Our results demonstrate that cats integrate visual and auditory signals to recognize human and conspecific emotions and they appear to modulate their behavior according to the valence of the emotion perceived. The understanding of cats’ socio-cognitive abilities to perceive their close partners’ emotions is crucial for improving the quality of human-cat and cat-cat relationships as well as cat welfare in the domestic environment.Recent studies demonstrated that cats form social bonds with both conspecifics and humans. One of the key factors regulating social interactions is the transfer of emotions between the individuals. The present study aimed at investigating cats’ spontaneous ability to match acoustic and visual signals for the recognition of both conspecific and human emotions. Different conspecific (cat “purr” and “hiss”) and heterospecific (human “happiness” and “anger”) emotional stimuli were presented to the tested population using a cross-modal paradigm. Results showed that cats are able to cross-modally match pictures of emotional faces with their related vocalizations, particularly for emotions of high intensity. Overall, our findings demonstrate that cats have a general mental representation of the emotions of their social partners, both conspecifics and humans.

Highlights

  • The recognition of individuals is central in social species

  • It has been found that cats are sensitive to human moods, and in particular, they engage more frequently in social interactions with depressed humans [61] and approach more frequently owners feeling extroverted or agitated [62]. In light of this evidence, the present study aims at investigating if cats are able to integrate visual and auditory signals to recognize human and conspecific emotions and if they modulate their behavior according to the valence of the emotion perceived

  • Regarding the heterospecific emotional signals, we found that cats correctly matched the human auditory and visual signals of “happiness” and “anger”, suggesting that they have a cognitive representation of these emotions, which allow cats to discriminate between them

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Summary

Introduction

The recognition of individuals is central in social species. Faces and voices convey information about individual identity and represent the most relevant cues used by human and several non-human species for individual recognition [1,2,3,4,5]. Recent studies have reported that some animals have an efficient visual (cattle: [6]; sheep: [7]; horses: [8]; and dogs: [9]) and auditory recognition of their conspecifics (cats: [10]; dogs: [11,12]; cattle: [13]; pig: [14]; and horses: [15]). A growing body of literature has demonstrated that domestic species recognize human faces (dogs: [5]; sheep: [22,23]; horses: [24]) and voices (cats: [3]; horses: [20,21]; pig: [19,25]; and dogs: [26]). Animals identify conspecifics and humans through separate sensory modalities

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