Abstract

The relationship between personality and learning abilities has become a growing field of interest. Studies have mainly focused on the relationship with performance, such as the speed of acquisition. In this study, we hypothesised that personality could in part also be related to a certain predisposition of an individual to switch more easily from a goal-directed process to a habit process during learning. To identify these processes, we conducted a contingency degradation protocol. This study investigated 1/ whether in general horses are able to adjust their response according to the contingency between their action and the reward, 2/ whether there are any relationships between certain personality profiles and a predisposition to switch more rapidly to habitual processes, and 3/ whether emotional states experienced during the learning procedure play a role in this switching. Personality tests were conducted on 29 horses, followed by a degradation contingency protocol. Overall, results show that horses were sensitive to contingency degradation between their action and the reward. Nevertheless, there was inter-individual variability: the horses presenting high fearfulness, and to a lesser extent low sensory sensitivity and low gregariousness were less sensitive to the degradation, demonstrating that they were more likely to switch to a habitual process. Contrary to our expectations, the emotional state experienced during the procedure did not seem to explain this switching. We conclude that personality is not only related to learning performance, but also in part to the process involved during learning, independently of the emotion experienced during the process. This study provides new theoretical knowledge on cognitive skills in ungulates.

Highlights

  • Over recent decades, the inter-individual variability in the expression of behaviours and in cognitive abilities has become a growing field of interest in the scientific literature [1]

  • The present study aimed to investigate 1/ whether in general horses are able to adjust their responses according to the level of contingency between their action and the reward, 2/ whether there is a relationship between certain personality profiles and a predisposition to switch more rapidly to habitual processes, and 3/ whether a specific emotional state experienced during the learning procedure plays a role in this switching

  • Our results show that overall horses were sensitive to contingency degradation between their action and the reward; they gradually decreased the number of times they touched the square object when the contingency was degraded

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Summary

Introduction

The inter-individual variability in the expression of behaviours and in cognitive abilities has become a growing field of interest in the scientific literature [1]. Personality and predisposition to form habit behaviours in horses the same lines, relationships linking personality and certain learning abilities have been identified [2, 3]. A subject that has preferentially developed a goal-directed process is aware of the consequences of its actions, and of the contingency between the action and its outcome, and will act . A subject that has developed a habit-type process will form a link between its action and the preceding stimulus, rather than its consequences. This subject will have a more rigid automatic behaviour and become less sensitive to changes in the value of the outcome, and in the causal relationship between the action and its consequence

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