Autor: |
null ManyDogs, Julia Espinosa, Jeffrey R Stevens, Daniela Alberghina, Michael Bogese, Emily Bray, Daphna Buchsbaum, Sarah-Elizabeth Byosiere, Camila Cavalli, Shany Dror, Hannah Fitzpatrick, Marianne S. Freeman, Shayla Frinton, Gitanjali Gnanadesikan, C.-N. Alexandrina Guran, Maeve Glover, Brian Hare, Elizabeth Hare, Mia Hickey, Daniel Horschler, Ludwig Huber, Hoi-Lam Jim, Angie Marie Johnston, Juliane Kaminski, Debbie Kelly, Valerie A. Kuhlmeier, Lily Lassiter, Evan MacLean, Ljerka Ostojic, Madeline Helmer Pelgrim, Sarita Pellowe, Hannah Salomons, Laurie Santos, Zachary A. Silver, Andrea Sommese, Christoph Völter, Carolyn Walsh |
Rok vydání: |
2023 |
Popis: |
To promote collaboration across canine science, address replicability issues, and advance open science practices within animal cognition, we have launched the ManyDogs consortium, modeled on similar ManyX projects in other fields. We aimed to create a collaborative network that (a) uses large, diverse samples to investigate and replicate findings, (b) promotes open science practices of pre-registering hypotheses, methods, and analysis plans, (c) investigates the influence of differences across populations and breeds, and (d) examines how different research methods and testing environments influence the robustness of results. Our first study combines a phenomenon that appears to be highly reliable—dogs’ ability to follow human pointing—with a question that remains controversial: do dogs interpret pointing as a social communicative gesture or as a simple associative cue? We collected data (N = 455) from 20 research sites on two conditions of a 2-alternative object choice task: (1) Ostensive (pointing to a baited cup after making eye-contact and saying the dog’s name); (2) Non-ostensive (pointing without eye-contact, after a throat-clearing auditory control cue). Comparing performance between conditions, while both were significantly above chance, there was no significant difference in dogs’ responses. This result was consistent across sites. Further, we found that dogs followed contralateral, momentary pointing at lower rates than has been reported in prior research, suggesting that there are limits to the robustness of point-following behavior: not all pointing styles are equally likely to elicit a response. Together, these findings underscore the important role of procedural details in study design and the broader need for replication studies in canine science. |
Databáze: |
OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
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