Social eavesdropping in the domestic dog
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Canine Eavesdropping |
S. Marshall-Pescini, C. Passalacqua, A. Ferrario, P. Valsecchi, E. Prato-PrevideSocial eavesdropping in the domestic dogAnimal Behaviour, Volume 81, Issue 6, June 2011, Pages 1177–1183
ABSTRACTEavesdropping on third-party interactions has been observed in a number
of species and is considered an important source of information in
decision-making processes relating to fighting and mate choice. Human
beings, however, use publicly available information flexibly in many
different contexts including assessing others’ altruistic tendencies,
which may in turn inform their choice of the most appropriate
cooperative partner. We assessed whether dogs, Canis familiaris,
were capable of discerning a generous versus selfish food-sharing
interaction between humans, and investigated which communicative cues
(voice versus gestures) may be more salient for them. Importantly a
control condition was included to ascertain whether it was in fact the
interaction between individuals as opposed to the direct actions of the
actors that the dogs evaluated. We found that the dogs were capable of
eavesdropping on human food-sharing interactions, and vocal
communication was particularly important to convey the human’s
cooperative versus noncooperative intent.
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