Krueger Konstanze, Heinze Jürgen
University of Regensburg, Biologie I, Universitätsstrasse 31, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
Anim Cogn. 2008 Jul;11(3):431-9. doi: 10.1007/s10071-007-0133-0. Epub 2008 Jan 9.
Animals that live in stable social groups need to gather information on their own relative position in the group's social hierarchy, by either directly threatening or by challenging others, or indirectly and in a less perilous manner , by observing interactions among others. Indirect inference of dominance relationships has previously been reported from primates, rats, birds, and fish. Here, we show that domestic horses, Equus caballus, are similarly capable of social cognition. Taking advantage of a specific "following behavior" that horses show towards humans in a riding arena, we investigated whether bystander horses adjust their response to an experimenter according to the observed interaction and their own dominance relationship with the horse whose reaction to the experimenter they had observed before. Horses copied the "following behavior" towards an experimenter after watching a dominant horse following but did not follow after observing a subordinate horse or a horse from another social group doing so. The "following behavior," which horses show towards an experimenter, therefore appears to be affected by the demonstrator's behavior and social status relative to the observer.
生活在稳定社会群体中的动物需要通过直接威胁或挑战其他动物,或者以一种间接且危险性较小的方式,即观察其他动物之间的互动,来收集有关自己在群体社会等级制度中相对地位的信息。此前已有报道称灵长类动物、大鼠、鸟类和鱼类能够间接推断支配关系。在此,我们表明家马(Equus caballus)同样具备社会认知能力。利用马匹在骑马场中对人类表现出的一种特定“跟随行为”,我们研究了旁观者马匹是否会根据观察到的互动以及它们自身与之前观察到对实验者做出反应的马匹之间的支配关系,来调整对实验者的反应。在观察到一匹优势马跟随实验者之后,马匹会模仿这种“跟随行为”;但在观察到一匹从属马或来自另一个社会群体的马这样做之后,它们则不会跟随。因此,马匹对实验者表现出的“跟随行为”似乎受到示范者相对于观察者的行为和社会地位的影响。