Abstract

The great increase in the study of dog cognition in the current century has yielded insights into canine cognition in a variety of domains. In this review, we seek to place our enhanced understanding of canine cognition into context. We argue that in order to assess dog cognition, we need to regard dogs from three different perspectives: phylogenetically, as carnivoran and specifically a canid; ecologically, as social, cursorial hunters; and anthropogenically, as a domestic animal. A principled understanding of canine cognition should therefore involve comparing dogs’ cognition with that of other carnivorans, other social hunters, and other domestic animals. This paper contrasts dog cognition with what is known about cognition in species that fit into these three categories, with a particular emphasis on wolves, cats, spotted hyenas, chimpanzees, dolphins, horses, and pigeons. We cover sensory cognition, physical cognition, spatial cognition, social cognition, and self-awareness. Although the comparisons are incomplete, because of the limited range of studies of some of the other relevant species, we conclude that dog cognition is influenced by the membership of all three of these groups, and taking all three groups into account, dog cognition does not look exceptional.

Highlights

  • The great increase in the study of dog cognition in the current century has yielded insights into canine cognition in a variety of domains

  • Their olfactory abilities are excellent, but similar abilities are found in some other carnivorans and domestic animals

  • There are clearly some tasks, in the area of physical cognition including tool use, where even the scant data we have suggest that there are other carnivorans who succeed better than dogs

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Summary

The phylogenetic context of dog cognition

Dogs are members of the mammalian order Carnivora (see Wang & Tedford, 2010, for a detailed evolutionary history of the dog). In the present paper, we shall not be focusing strongly on the cognitive differences between dogs and wolves (which have in any case already been thoroughly explored in recent literature), but rather on the differences between dogs and wolves, considered together, and other carnivorans This is a kind of comparison that has drawn much less attention. It is often difficult to extract the true cognitive content from that kind of literature, so for the purposes of this paper we will set it aside Beyond these domestic species, there is a significant recent literature on some aspects of the cognition of spotted hyenas, of some bears, and of some pinnipeds. As we shall see, it is possible to identify a number of cognitive domains in which we have significant evidence both about dogs and about one or more other species of carnivorans

The ecological context of dog cognition
The anthropogenic context of dog cognition
The comparative project
Associative learning
Sensory cognition
Physical cognition
Spatial cognition
Social cognition
The comparative intelligence of dogs
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