Novel approach to study the perception of animacy in dogs

Humans tend to perceive inanimate objects as animate based on simple motion cues. So far this perceptual bias has been studied mostly in humans by utilizing two-dimensional video and interactive displays. Considering its importance for survival, the perception of animacy is probably also widespread...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2017-05, Vol.12 (5), p.e0177010-e0177010
Hauptverfasser: Abdai, Judit, Baño Terencio, Cristina, Miklósi, Ádám
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Baño Terencio, Cristina
Miklósi, Ádám
description Humans tend to perceive inanimate objects as animate based on simple motion cues. So far this perceptual bias has been studied mostly in humans by utilizing two-dimensional video and interactive displays. Considering its importance for survival, the perception of animacy is probably also widespread among animals, however two-dimensional displays are not necessarily the best approach to study the phenomenon in non-human species. Here we applied a novel method to study whether dogs recognize a dependent (chasing-like) movement pattern performed by inanimate agents in live demonstration. We found that dogs showed more interest toward the agents that demonstrated the chasing-like motion, compared to those that were involved in the independent movement. We suggest that dogs spontaneously recognized the chasing-like pattern and thus they may have considered the interacting partners as animate agents. This methodological approach may be useful to test perceptual animacy in other non-human species.
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subjects Acceleration
Adults
Animal cognition
Animal training
Animals
Attachment
Attention
Attraction
Automation
Babies
Behavior, Animal
Biology and Life Sciences
Brain
Chicks
Cognition
Colleges & universities
Comparative ethology
Contingency
Cortex (temporal)
Cues
Discrimination
Dogs
Engineering and Technology
Ethology
Eye (anatomy)
Food
Human motion
Infants
Information processing
Methods
Monkeys & apes
Motion detection
Motivation
Movement disorders
Navigation behavior
Ontogeny
Perception
Physical properties
Physical Sciences
Physical training
Preferences
Primates
Psychological aspects
Psychophysics
Recognition
Representations
Researchers
Sensorimotor integration
Separation
Social behavior
Social interactions
Social Sciences
Stimuli
Studies
Temporal lobe
Training
Vertebrates
Visual cortex
Visual discrimination
Visual perception
title Novel approach to study the perception of animacy in dogs
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