Abstract

Inspired by work on infants, we investigated whether dogs’ behaviors are guided by human displays of preference, contrasting with the animals’ own choices. In a rewarded fetching task, dogs override their own interest toward “disgusting” objects and retrieve what the owner prefers. However, in previous research, both objects were inherently neutral to the dogs and they might have chosen the owner’s object because a “happy owner” predicts a positive outcome. If dogs are indeed able to override their own interests, we expected them to fetch the owner’s object even if (1) they would prefer another one and (2) do not receive a reward for it. Two objects were compared, a toy (hoop) and a bracelet. After establishing that the toy was preferred by all dogs in an initial test of preference, we applied a two-choice procedure to test if either fetching or looking at the objects from a distance would be affected by the owner’s choice. In Study 1, the owner demonstrated happiness toward the bracelet and disgust toward the toy with both facial and body gestures accompanied by verbalizations. Then the owner asked the dog to fetch, without providing additional guiding cues. All dogs fetched the toy, indicating that their own choice was not overcome by the positive emotional state signaled by the owner. To avoid direct contact with the objects, in Study 2 we placed the objects on an unreachable spot after the emotion demonstration and measured the duration of looking at the objects. In the “bracelet” (non-matching) group the owners demonstrated happiness toward the bracelet and disgust toward the toy, similar to Study 1. In the “toy” (matching) group the owners showed happiness toward the toy and disgust toward the bracelet. When the objects were placed on the unreachable spot, dogs looked at both objects for the same amount of time in the non-matching group, but longer at the toy in the matching group. Although the studies did not demonstrate that dogs override their own preferences for an object, the results suggested that the owners’ expressed preference was perceived by the dogs and guided their perceptual focus.

Highlights

  • Studies on the cognitive and emotional development of pre-verbal children often face similar challenges as those conducted with non-human animals

  • Dogs fetched the object which was preferred by them, and not the object that which was preferred by the owner

  • We assumed that an object in reach acts as a stronger affordance, while previous work had shown that objects out of reach stimulate what appears to be “showing” behavior in dogs (Miklósi et al, 2000) suggesting that placing the objects out of reach could stimulate dogs to direct more attention toward their owners, thereby weakening the affordance provided by their preferred object

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Studies on the cognitive and emotional development of pre-verbal children often face similar challenges as those conducted with non-human animals. Expected rewards associated with a satisfied human may compete with rewards deriving from own preferences, in which case being able to choose the former over the latter may require inhibitory control In light of this literature, we consider here that sensitivity for others’ internal states, like preference, might not necessarily show up in active behaviors. (1) we used two objects with different inherent valence, one clearly preferred by the dogs and (2) we have not rewarded the dogs for their choice, contrary to previous studies when the choice of objects marked by the positive emotional expression of the owner resulted in food (Buttelmann and Tomasello, 2013; Turcsán et al, 2015) or toy rewards (Merola et al, 2014), which may have affected the choice behaviors of the subjects. That in externally observable behaviors, mechanisms like empathy or communication cannot always be distinguished (Miklósi, 2009)

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Ethical Statement
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DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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