Cooperative Communication with Humans Evolved to Emerge Early in Domestic Dogs.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
Although we know that dogs evolved from wolves, it remains unclear how domestication affected dog cognition. One hypothesis suggests dog domestication altered social maturation by a process of selecting for an attraction to humans.1-3 Under this account, dogs became more flexible in using inherited skills to cooperatively communicate with a new social partner that was previously feared and expressed these unusual social skills early in development.4-6 Here, we comparedog (n = 44) and wolf (n = 37) puppies, 5-18 weeks old, on a battery of temperament and cognition tasks. We find that dog puppies are more attracted to humans, read human gestures more skillfully, and make more eye contact with humans than wolf puppies. The two species are similarly attracted to familiar objects and perform similarly on non-social measures of memory and inhibitory control. These results are consistent with the idea that domestication enhanced the cooperative-communicative abilities of dogs as selection for attraction to humans altered social maturation.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Salomons, H; Smith, KCM; Callahan-Beckel, M; Callahan, M; Levy, K; Kennedy, BS; Bray, EE; Gnanadesikan, GE; Horschler, DJ; Gruen, M; Tan, J; White, P; vonHoldt, BM; MacLean, EL; Hare, B
Published Date
- July 2021
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 31 / 14
Start / End Page
- 3137 - 3144.e11
PubMed ID
- 34256018
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC8610089
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1879-0445
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0960-9822
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.051
Language
- eng