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The Domestication of Social Cognition in Dogs
The domestication of social cognition in dogs
Brian Hare et al.
Science 298 (5598), 1634-6 (Nov 2002)
10.1126/science.1072702
Posted by hbeale to cognition dog on Fri Oct 19 2007 at 02:47 UTC | info | related
 
Making inferences about the location of hidden food: social dog, causal ape.
Making Inferences About the Location of Hidden Food Social Dog Causal Ape
Journal of Comparative Psychology 120 (1), 38 (2006)
Domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and great apes from the genus Pan were tested on a series of object choice tasks. In each task, the location of hidden food was indicated for subjects by some kind of communicative, behavioral, or physical cue. On the basis of differences in the ecologies of these 2 genera, as well as on previous research, the authors hypothesized that dogs should be especially skillful in using human communicative cues such as the pointing gesture, whereas apes should be especially skillful in using physical, causal cues such as food in a cup making noise when it is shaken. The overall pattern of performance by the 2 genera strongly supported this social-dog, causal-ape hypothesis. This result is discussed in terms of apes? adaptations for complex, extractive foraging and dogs? adaptations, during the domestication process, for cooperative communication with humans.
Posted by hbeale to cognition dog on Fri Oct 19 2007 at 02:47 UTC | info | related
 
Word Learning in a Domestic Dog: Evidence for "Fast Mapping"
Word learning in a domestic dog evidence for fast mapping
Juliane Kaminski, Josep Call, and Julia Fischer
Science 304 (5677), 1682-3 (Jun 2004)
During speech acquisition, children form quick and rough hypotheses about the meaning of a new word after only a single exposure?a process dubbed "fast mapping." Here we provide evidence that a border collie, Rico, is able to fast map. Rico knew the labels of over 200 different items. He inferred the names of novel items by exclusion learning and correctly retrieved those items right away as well as 4 weeks after the initial exposure. Fast mapping thus appears to be mediated by general learning and memory mechanisms also found in other animals and not by a language acquisition device that is special to humans.
Posted by hbeale to cognition dog on Fri Oct 19 2007 at 02:47 UTC | info | related

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