Monique A. R. Udell, Nicole R. Dorey, Clive D. L. Wynne
Can your dog read your mind?: Understanding the causes of canine perspective taking.
Learn Behav. 2011 December; 39(4): 289–302. doi: 10.3758/s13420-011-0034-6
Abstract
Prior studies have documented the
domestic dog's (Canis lupus familiaris) sensitivity to human
attentional state, including a tendency to preferentially beg for food
from attentive individuals and an ability to selectively perform
forbidden behaviors when humans are not looking. Due to the success of
dogs on perspective-taking tasks, some have hypothesized that domestic
dogs may have theory of mind, or the ability to infer what other
individuals know. Here we provide the first evidence that
nondomesticated canids, grey wolves (Canis lupus), are also sensitive to
human attentional state under some conditions. We also demonstrate that
dogs do not display an undifferentiated sensitivity to all visual cues
of attentional state. Rather, dogs are more sensitive to stimuli
encountered in their home environment. Some dogs perform poorly on
perspective-taking tasks. These findings have important implications for
the interpretation of research designed to understand complex social
cognition across species.
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