Comparative Cognition, Messerli Research Institute, University of Veterinary Medicine of Vienna, Medical University of Vienna and University of Vienna, Veterinärplatz 1, Vienna, 1210, Austria.
Department of Comparative Cultural Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, 04103, Germany.
Anim Cogn. 2024 Mar 30;27(1):28. doi: 10.1007/s10071-024-01870-w.
The ability to make sense of and predict others' actions is foundational for many socio-cognitive abilities. Dogs (Canis familiaris) constitute interesting comparative models for the study of action perception due to their marked sensitivity to human actions. We tested companion dogs (N = 21) in two screen-based eye-tracking experiments, adopting a task previously used with human infants and apes, to assess which aspects of an agent's action dogs consider relevant to the agent's underlying intentions. An agent was shown repeatedly acting upon the same one of two objects, positioned in the same location. We then presented the objects in swapped locations and the agent approached the objects centrally (Experiment 1) or the old object in the new location or the new object in the old location (Experiment 2). Dogs' anticipatory fixations and looking times did not reflect an expectation that agents should have continued approaching the same object nor the same location as witnessed during the brief familiarization phase; this contrasts with some findings with infants and apes, but aligns with findings in younger infants before they have sufficient motor experience with the observed action. However, dogs' pupil dilation and latency to make an anticipatory fixation suggested that, if anything, dogs expected the agents to keep approaching the same location rather than the same object, and their looking times showed sensitivity to the animacy of the agents. We conclude that dogs, lacking motor experience with the observed actions of grasping or kicking performed by a human or inanimate agent, might interpret such actions as directed toward a specific location rather than a specific object. Future research will need to further probe the suitability of anticipatory looking as measure of dogs' socio-cognitive abilities given differences between the visual systems of dogs and primates.
理解和预测他人行为的能力是许多社会认知能力的基础。狗(Canis familiaris)由于对人类行为的高度敏感,成为研究动作感知的有趣比较模型。我们在两个基于屏幕的眼动追踪实验中测试了伴侣犬(N=21),采用了以前用于人类婴儿和类人猿的任务,以评估狗认为与主体的潜在意图相关的主体行为的哪些方面。一个主体反复对两个物体中的同一个物体进行操作,这些物体位于相同的位置。然后,我们将物体交换位置,主体接近物体的中心(实验 1),或者接近旧物体在新位置或新物体在旧位置(实验 2)。狗的预期注视和注视时间并没有反映出主体应该继续接近相同物体或与短暂熟悉阶段所见证的相同位置的期望;这与一些婴儿和类人猿的发现形成对比,但与在观察到的动作之前没有足够的运动经验的年幼婴儿的发现一致。然而,狗的瞳孔扩张和做出预期注视的潜伏期表明,如果有的话,狗期望主体继续接近相同的位置,而不是相同的物体,它们的注视时间对主体的能动性表现出敏感性。我们得出结论,狗缺乏对人类或无生命主体进行的抓取或踢腿等观察到的动作的运动经验,可能会将此类动作解释为针对特定位置而不是特定物体。未来的研究需要进一步探究预期注视作为衡量狗的社会认知能力的适宜性,因为狗和灵长类动物的视觉系统存在差异。