Abstract
The
present investigations were undertaken to compare interspecific
communicative abilities of dogs and wolves, which were socialized to
humans at comparable levels. The first study demonstrated that
socialized wolves were able to locate the place of hidden food indicated
by the touching and, to some extent, pointing cues provided by the
familiar human experimenter, but their performance remained inferior to
that of dogs. In the second study, we have found that, after undergoing
training to solve a simple manipulation task, dogs that are faced with
an insoluble version of the same problem look/gaze at the human, while
socialized wolves do not. Based on these observations, we suggest that
the key difference between dog and wolf behavior is the dogs' ability to
look at the human's face. Since looking behavior has an important
function in initializing and maintaining communicative interaction in
human communication systems, we suppose that by positive feedback
processes (both evolutionary and ontogenetically) the readiness of dogs
to look at the human face has lead to complex forms of dog-human
communication that cannot be achieved in wolves even after extended
socialization.
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