Helene Pettersson, Juliane Kaminski, Esther Herrmann,
Michael Tomasello
Understanding of human communicative motives in domestic
dogs
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, Volume 133, Issues 3–4,
September 2011, Pages 235–245
Abstract
Chimpanzees find it easier to locate
food when a human prohibits them from going to a certain location than when she
indicates that location helpfully. Human children, in contrast, use the
cooperative gesture more readily. The question here was whether domestic dogs
are more like chimpanzees, in this regard, or more like human children. In our
first study we presented 40 dogs with two communicative contexts. In the
cooperative context the experimenter informed the subject where food was hidden
by pointing helpfully (with a cooperative tone of voice). In the competitive
context the experimenter extended her arm towards the correct location in a
prohibitive manner, palm of hand out (uttering a forbidding command in a
prohibitive tone of voice). Dogs were successful in the cooperative condition (P = 0.005) but chose randomly
in the competitive condition (P = 0.221).
The second study independently varied the two characteristics of the
communicative gesture (the gesture itself and the tone of voice). In addition
to replicating dogs’ better performance with the cooperative gestures, this
study suggests that tone of voice and context had more effect than type of
gesture. In the context of food acquisition, domestic dogs, like human
children, seem more prepared to use human gestures when they are given
cooperatively.
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