Abstract
Domestic dogs (Canis familiaris)
were administered a variant of the delayed matching-to-sample task in
which they had to recover a hidden object and in which both spatial and
figurative information were kept constant at the outset of each trial.
Thereafter, either spatial (i.e. spatial condition) or figurative cues
(i.e. figurative condition) became relevant to solve the task. The
results revealed that dogs rapidly associated a spatial cue with the
recovery of the object. The discussion emphasizes the role of cognitive
and ecological constraints to account for the fact that figurative
information was not readily used as a cue to guide search behavior.
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