4.3 Article

Testing the social dog hypothesis: Are dogs also more skilled than chimpanzees in non-communicative social tasks?

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES
Volume 81, Issue 3, Pages 423-428

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2009.04.003

Keywords

Dogs; Chimpanzees; Reversal learning; Social cognition

Funding

  1. The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  2. German Federal Ministry for Education and Research

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Relative to non-human primates, domestic dogs possess a number of social skills that seem exceptional-particularly in solving problems involving cooperation and communication with humans. However, the degree to which dogs' unusual skills are contextually specialized is still unclear. Here, we presented dogs with a social problem that did not require them to use cooperative-communicative cues and compared their performance to that of chimpanzees to assess the extent of dogs' capabilities relative to those of non-human primates. We tested the abilities of dogs and chimpanzees to inhibit previously learned responses by using a social and a non-social version of a reversal learning task. In contrast to previous findings in cooperative-communicative social tasks, dogs were not more skilled on the social task than the non-social task, while chimpanzees were significantly better in the social paradigm. Chimpanzees were able to inhibit their prior learning better and more quickly in the social paradigm than they were in the non-social paradigm, while dogs took more time to inhibit what they had learned in both versions of the task. These results suggest that the dogs' sophisticated social skills in using human social cues may be relatively specialized as a result of domestication. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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