Carrie the Dancing Dog |
Abstract
A
successful procedure for studying imitative behavior in non-humans is
the bidirectional control procedure in which observers are exposed to a
demonstrator that responds by moving a manipulandum in one of two
different directions (e.g., left vs. right). Imitative learning is
demonstrated when observers make the response in the direction that they
observed it being made. This procedure controls for socially mediated
effects (the mere presence of a demonstrator), stimulus enhancement
(attention drawn to a manipulandum by its movement), and if an
appropriate control is included, emulation (learning how the environment
works). Recent research with dogs has found that dogs may not
demonstrate imitative learning when the demonstrator is human. In the
present research, we found that when odors were controlled for, dogs
imitated the direction of a screen-push demonstrated by another dog more
than in a control condition in which they observed the screen move
independently while another dog was present. Furthermore, we found that
dogs would match the direction of screen-push demonstrated by a human
and they were equally likely to match the direction in which the screen
moved independently while a human was present.
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