Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts

Abstract Dogs’ comprehension of human gestures has been characterized as more human-like than that of our closest primate relatives, due to a level of flexibility and spontaneous performance on par with that of human infants. However, many of the critical experiments that have been the core evidence...

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Main Authors: Hannah Salomons, Jordan Sokoloff, Brian Hare
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2024-11-01
Series:Animal Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-024-01901-6
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author Hannah Salomons
Jordan Sokoloff
Brian Hare
author_facet Hannah Salomons
Jordan Sokoloff
Brian Hare
author_sort Hannah Salomons
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Dogs’ comprehension of human gestures has been characterized as more human-like than that of our closest primate relatives, due to a level of flexibility and spontaneous performance on par with that of human infants. However, many of the critical experiments that have been the core evidence for an understanding of human communicative intentions in dogs have yet to be replicated. Here we test the ability of dogs to comprehend a pointing gesture while varying the salience of the gesture and the context in which it is made. We find that subjects’ (N = 70) choices across two experiments are consistent with an understanding of communicative intentions. Results largely replicate previous critical controls that rule out a number of egocentric hypotheses including an attraction to human hands and novelty. We also find that dogs spontaneously follow a human gesture in a new context: choosing which direction to navigate around a barrier. The flexible and spontaneous problem solving observed in dogs’ gesture comprehension is discussed in relation to its similarity to that of human infants. We conclude with important avenues for future research.
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institution Kabale University
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series Animal Cognition
spelling doaj-art-b5a6fbc7d7634529946ffed4ea9f4b192025-01-26T12:44:36ZengSpringerAnimal Cognition1435-94562024-11-0127111410.1007/s10071-024-01901-6Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contextsHannah Salomons0Jordan Sokoloff1Brian Hare2Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke UniversitySchool of Veterinary Medicine, University of PennsylvaniaDepartment of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke UniversityAbstract Dogs’ comprehension of human gestures has been characterized as more human-like than that of our closest primate relatives, due to a level of flexibility and spontaneous performance on par with that of human infants. However, many of the critical experiments that have been the core evidence for an understanding of human communicative intentions in dogs have yet to be replicated. Here we test the ability of dogs to comprehend a pointing gesture while varying the salience of the gesture and the context in which it is made. We find that subjects’ (N = 70) choices across two experiments are consistent with an understanding of communicative intentions. Results largely replicate previous critical controls that rule out a number of egocentric hypotheses including an attraction to human hands and novelty. We also find that dogs spontaneously follow a human gesture in a new context: choosing which direction to navigate around a barrier. The flexible and spontaneous problem solving observed in dogs’ gesture comprehension is discussed in relation to its similarity to that of human infants. We conclude with important avenues for future research.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-024-01901-6Pet dogsGestureIntentionsCommunicationCooperation
spellingShingle Hannah Salomons
Jordan Sokoloff
Brian Hare
Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
Animal Cognition
Pet dogs
Gesture
Intentions
Communication
Cooperation
title Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
title_full Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
title_fullStr Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
title_full_unstemmed Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
title_short Companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
title_sort companion dogs flexibly and spontaneously comprehend human gestures in multiple contexts
topic Pet dogs
Gesture
Intentions
Communication
Cooperation
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-024-01901-6
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AT jordansokoloff companiondogsflexiblyandspontaneouslycomprehendhumangesturesinmultiplecontexts
AT brianhare companiondogsflexiblyandspontaneouslycomprehendhumangesturesinmultiplecontexts