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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Dogs, Canis familiaris, communicate with humans to request but not to inform



Juliane Kaminski, Martina Neumann, Juliane Bräuer, Josep Call, Michael Tomasello
Dogs, Canis familiaris, communicate with humans to request but not to inform
Animal Behaviour, Volume 82, Issue 4, October 2011, Pages 651–658

ABSTRACT
Dogs are especially skilful at comprehending human communicative signals. This raises the question of whether they are also able to produce such signals flexibly, specifically, whether they helpfully produce indicative (‘showing’) behaviours to inform an ignorant human. In experiment 1, dogs indicated the location of an object more frequently when it was something they wanted themselves than when it was something the human wanted. There was some suggestion that this might be different when the human was their owner. So in experiment 2 we investigated whether dogs could understand when the owner needed helpful information to find a particular object (out of two) that they needed. They did not. Our findings, therefore, do not support the hypothesis that dogs communicate with humans to inform them of things they do not know.

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