Dogs' attention towards humans depends on their relationship, not only on social familiarity.

Lisa Horn, Friederike Range, Ludwig Huber
Author Information
  1. Lisa Horn: Department of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Althanstraße 14, 1090, Vienna, Austria. lisa.horn@univie.ac.at

Abstract

Both in humans and non-human animals, it has been shown that individuals attend more to those they have previously interacted with and/or they are more closely associated with than to unfamiliar individuals. Whether this preference is mediated by mere social familiarity based on exposure or by the specific relationship between the two individuals, however, remains unclear. The domestic dog is an interesting subject in this line of research as it lives in the human environment and regularly interacts with numerous humans, yet it often has a particularly close relationship with its owner. Therefore, we investigated how long dogs (Canis familiaris) would attend to the actions of two familiar humans and one unfamiliar experimenter, while varying whether dogs had a close relationship with only one or both familiar humans. Our data provide evidence that social familiarity by itself cannot account for dogs' increased attention towards their owners since they only attended more to those familiar humans with whom they also had a close relationship.

References

  1. Anim Cogn. 2009 Jan;12(1):181-92 [PMID: 18716802]
  2. J Comp Psychol. 2003 Jun;117(2):156-65 [PMID: 12856786]
  3. Trends Cogn Sci. 2009 Apr;13(4):148-53 [PMID: 19285912]
  4. Anim Behav. 2008 Feb 1;75(2):501-508 [PMID: 25948875]
  5. Dev Sci. 2009 Apr;12(3):426-37 [PMID: 19371367]
  6. J Comp Psychol. 2007 Nov;121(4):380-6 [PMID: 18085921]
  7. Curr Biol. 2012 Feb 7;22(3):209-12 [PMID: 22226744]
  8. Anim Cogn. 2006 Oct;9(4):355-67 [PMID: 17024511]
  9. J Comp Psychol. 1998 Sep;112(3):219-29 [PMID: 9770312]
  10. Child Dev. 2009 May-Jun;80(3):750-61 [PMID: 19489901]
  11. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2009 Aug 27;364(1528):2299-309 [PMID: 19620102]
  12. Science. 2009 Sep 4;325(5945):1269-72 [PMID: 19729660]
  13. Physiol Behav. 2011 Sep 1;104(3):392-7 [PMID: 21557959]
  14. Trends Cogn Sci. 2011 Feb;15(2):68-76 [PMID: 21215677]
  15. PLoS One. 2011 Mar 25;6(3):e18118 [PMID: 21464962]

Grants

  1. P 21244/Austrian Science Fund FWF
  2. P 21418/Austrian Science Fund FWF

MeSH Term

Adult
Animals
Attention
Dogs
Female
Human-Animal Bond
Humans
Male
Recognition, Psychology
Social Behavior

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0humansrelationshipindividualssocialfamiliarityclosefamiliarattendunfamiliartwodogsoneattentiontowardsnon-humananimalsshownpreviouslyinteractedand/orcloselyassociatedWhetherpreferencemediatedmerebasedexposurespecifichoweverremainsuncleardomesticdoginterestingsubjectlineresearchliveshumanenvironmentregularlyinteractsnumerousyetoftenparticularlyownerThereforeinvestigatedlongCanisfamiliarisactionsexperimentervaryingwhetherdataprovideevidenceaccountdogs'increasedownerssinceattendedalsoDogs'depends

Similar Articles

Cited By