1 / 29

Comprehension of human pointing gestures in young human-reared wolves and dogs

Comprehension of human pointing gestures in young human-reared wolves and dogs. Katherine Mahoney Minako Berthet. Background. Three mechanisms to facilitate animals success in locating hidden food based on human given cues: Extensive experience with humans

mira
Download Presentation

Comprehension of human pointing gestures in young human-reared wolves and dogs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comprehension of human pointing gestures in young human-reared wolves and dogs Katherine Mahoney Minako Berthet

  2. Background • Three mechanisms to facilitate animals success in locating hidden food based on human given cues: • Extensive experience with humans • Formal training to use human given communication cues • Evolution of domestication

  3. Background • Evolution of domestication • Seen in puppies with limited human contact • Domestic cats, foxes selected for tameness • Evolution involves both divergent and convergent processes • Living in close contact, relying on human provision might be affected by similar selection pressures • Decrease fear of humans ect.

  4. Background • Why test wolves vs. dogs? • Comparative studies show what features are likely because of domestications

  5. Background • Ensure there are no priori reasons why one species cannot perform a task • Species compared must have the same environmental experiences both development and testing • Need to give “inferior” species the ability to improve

  6. Background • Wolves and dogs are the most intensely investigated pair of a domesticated animal and its wild pair. • Studies have been small and limited • Found that wolves didn’t rely on any human gestures • questionable because of the different experiences

  7. Background • Present study: • Larger sample size • Socialized to humans in the same way • Tested in the same manner

  8. Goal of study • Test two behavioral aspects: • Dogs’ sensitivity to human gestural cues when locating hidden food • Tendency to look at humans in problem situations • Hand-raising/extensive experience with humans or formal training in object-choice tests

  9. Study 1:comparing wolf and dog puppies in a two-way choice task with human distal pointing

  10. Study 1: Subjects • Hand-reared wolves • 9 grey wolf pups taken from mother 4-7 days after birth. • Hand-reared dogs • 8 dog puppies from dog shelter litters taken from mother 4-10 days after birth • Pet dogs • 9 dog puppies from dog breeders were taken from mother 6-9 weeks after birth.

  11. Study 1: Pretraining • Experimenter kneels in front of 2 bowls. • Subject and owner are facing the experimenter; owner is restraining subject. • Experimenter shows food to subject and slowly places it in one bowl, subject is then released. • Subjects that do not eat food are excluded from the test.

  12. Study 1: Methods • Experimenter places food in one bowl then places bowls on floor. • Experimenter kneels by bowl, makes eye contact and pointed at baited bowl. • Clapping/name calling prior to pointing if no eye contact is made. • 5 seconds to choose correct bowl  praise and food.

  13. Study 1: Results • Hand-reared dogs and pet dogs performed the same (above chance). • Hand-reared wolves did not perform above chance and did not maintain eye contact.

  14. Study 2:use of different human pointing gestures in young wolves

  15. Study 2: Methods • Subjects: 7 individually socialized wolf pups 7-11 months old (5 from the first study) • Same procedure as study 1 except now standing upright • 4m x 4m enclosure • 20 trial for each cueing type in a predetermined, semi random order

  16. Study 2: Methods • Momentary distal pointing - Definite point for 1 second, then subject released, distance 50cm 2) Dynamic distal pointing -Held arm in position subject released, distance 50cm 3) Momentary proximal pointing -Definite point for 1 second, closer to bowl distance 10 cm 4) Touching -Touched rim of bowl, 1 second 5) Standing behind -Stepped behind bowl and looked at subject till it made its choice

  17. Study 2: Results • Slightly elevated performance on hand-given gestures • Result of association from being hand fed? • Signs of learning • Possible effect of developmental maturation

  18. Study 2: Results

  19. Study 3:use of different human pointing gestures in young wolves

  20. Study 3: Method • 4 wolves from Study 1 (but not used in Study 2) were tested in 22 sessions over 6.5 months. • Same five cues as Study 2 (but in a pre-determined order). • Momentary distal pointing (22 sessions = 220 trials) • Standing behind (4 sessions = 40 trials) • Dynamic distal pointing (6 sessions = 60 trials) • Touching object (4 sessions = 40 trials) • Momentary proximal pointing (6 sessions = 60 trials) • Control trial: no signals.

  21. Study 3: Results

  22. Study 3: Results • Most successful with gestures in which the experimenter’s hand or body was close to the baited container. • May be learned through feeding. • Little evidence of learning (small sample size?)

  23. Study 4: comparing the wolves after extensive training and naïve dogs of same age in momentary distal pointing trials

  24. Study 4: methods • Results of 10 wolves from the previous studies • Comparison 10 pet dogs • Dogs tested in a room at dog school • Wolves same 4m x 4m at the wolf-farm

  25. Study 4: Results • No significant difference beteen trained wolves and naïve dogs in the number of their correct choices or their latency of eye-contact with the pointer • 5 wolves (50%) and 5 dogs (50%) chose correctly above chance • Number of correct choices of wolves increased since tests at 4 months and the latency of eye-contact decreased • Dogs did not show this impovement

  26. Study 4: Results

  27. Discussion: Summary • Removal of biases (phobias, differences in day to day interactions) is necessary. • Dog pups do not require special, intensive socialization to utilize a more difficult version of a pointing gesture. • Hand-reared wolves can only rely on some gestures spontaneously. • Wolves require months of training to reach same level of success that is spontaneously achieved by dogs.

  28. Discussion • Associative: hand-rearing allows for the formation of association between human hand and food. • Communicative: distal pointing is not likely to be associative (chimps fail distal pointing at 20 cm!). • Dogs will follow gesture even if experimenter stands behind empty location.

  29. Discussion: Evolution/Selection • Dogs have increased tendency to spontaneously make eye contact  selection of dogs that were perceptive to human cues. • High variability in wolves ability (despite close relation) indicates little selection of ability that is strongly selected in dogs. • Variation may be the basis for selecting ‘prospective’ companions from ancient wolf/dog populations during early domestication.

More Related