ICIVET-LITORAL   24728
INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS VETERINARIAS DEL LITORAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Wolves (Canis lupus) and Dogs (Canis familiaris) Differ in Following Human Gaze Into Distant Space But Respond Similar to Their Packmates? Gaze
Autor/es:
WERHAHN, GERALDINE; VIRÁNYI, ZSÓFIAVER PERFIL; BARRERA, GABRIELA; SOMMESE, ANDREA; RANGE, FRIEDERIKE
Revista:
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Editorial:
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
Referencias:
Lugar: Washington DC, (USA); Año: 2016
ISSN:
0735-7036
Resumen:
Gaze following into distant space is defined as visual co-orientation with another individual?s head direction allowing the gaze follower to gain information on its environment. Human and nonhuman animals share this basic gaze following behavior, suggested to rely on a simple reflexive mechanism andbelieved to be an important prerequisite for complex forms of social cognition. Pet dogs differ from other species in that they follow only communicative human gaze clearly addressed to them. However, in an earlier experiment we showed that wolves follow human gaze into distant space. Here we set out to investigate whether domestication has affected gaze following in dogs by comparing pack-living dogs and wolves raised and kept under the same conditions. In Study 1 we found that in contrast to the wolves, these dogs did not follow minimally communicative human gaze into distant space in the same test paradigm. In the observational Study 2 we found that pack-living dogs and wolves, similarly vigilant to environmental stimuli, follow the spontaneous gaze of their conspecifics similarly often. Our findings suggest that domestication did not affect the gaze following ability of dogs itself. The results raisehypotheses about which other dog skills might have been altered through domestication that may have influenced their performance in Study 1. Because following human gaze in dogs might be influenced by special evolutionary as well as developmental adaptations to interactions with humans, we suggest thatcomparing dogs to other animal species might be more informative when done in intraspecific social contexts.