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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Dogs choose a human informant: Metacognition in canines



Shannon McMahon, Krista Macpherson, William A. Roberts
Dogs choose a human informant: Metacognition in canines
Behavioural Processes, Volume 85, Issue 3, October 2010, Pages 293–298

Abstract

The presence of metacognition in animals has been suggested by the observation that non-human primates will seek out information about the location of a hidden reward before responding. In experiment 1, dogs failed to make an information-seeking response that involved re-positioning themselves in space so that they could view a cue that indicated the location of food. In experiments 2 and 3, dogs were allowed to choose between two people, an informant that pointed to the location of food and a non-informant that provided no information. Dogs showed a clear preference for the informant, even when choice of the informant led to no greater chance of reward than choice of the non-informant. In a procedure that involves human communication, dogs show information-seeking behavior.

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