Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition

The current study explores the effects of a dog’s environment, e.g., shelter vs pet, on their social cognition. Dogs’ understanding of human social cues has been explained both by the domestication hypothesis and the human exposure hypothesis. The domestication hypothesis asserts that dogs’ understa...

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Main Author: O'Shea, Kathleen
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ IWU 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/jwprc/2018/posters2/8
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spelling ftillinoiswu:oai:digitalcommons.iwu.edu:jwprc-3597 2023-05-15T15:50:37+02:00 Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition O'Shea, Kathleen 2018-04-21T21:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/jwprc/2018/posters2/8 unknown Digital Commons @ IWU https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/jwprc/2018/posters2/8 John Wesley Powell Student Research Conference Education text 2018 ftillinoiswu 2023-03-25T23:32:38Z The current study explores the effects of a dog’s environment, e.g., shelter vs pet, on their social cognition. Dogs’ understanding of human social cues has been explained both by the domestication hypothesis and the human exposure hypothesis. The domestication hypothesis asserts that dogs’ understanding of human social cues, intentions, and emotions comes from their side-by-side evolution with humans. In contrast, the human exposure hypothesis suggests that dogs’ level of understanding is determined by their life experience/ontogeny with humans. Because shelter dogs have had less experience with humans, research suggests they have less social understanding of humans; on the other hand, pet dogs have had a significant amount of experience with humans and therefore may be assumed to have greater social understanding of humans. The current study takes an ontogenetic approach as it makes different predictions for each theory and there is less research in this area. Methods for the study include a self-control measure along with three social cognition measures. The self-control measure is used as a non-social control to measure for general cognitive capacity. The social cognition measures include the “Impossible Toy” test, an object-choice task, and a gaze-following task. The results of the study will help to determine which theory of dogs’ social cognition better explains dogs’ strong socio-cognitive abilities in understanding humans. Text Canis lupus Illinois Wesleyan University: Digital Commons@IWU
institution Open Polar
collection Illinois Wesleyan University: Digital Commons@IWU
op_collection_id ftillinoiswu
language unknown
topic Education
spellingShingle Education
O'Shea, Kathleen
Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
topic_facet Education
description The current study explores the effects of a dog’s environment, e.g., shelter vs pet, on their social cognition. Dogs’ understanding of human social cues has been explained both by the domestication hypothesis and the human exposure hypothesis. The domestication hypothesis asserts that dogs’ understanding of human social cues, intentions, and emotions comes from their side-by-side evolution with humans. In contrast, the human exposure hypothesis suggests that dogs’ level of understanding is determined by their life experience/ontogeny with humans. Because shelter dogs have had less experience with humans, research suggests they have less social understanding of humans; on the other hand, pet dogs have had a significant amount of experience with humans and therefore may be assumed to have greater social understanding of humans. The current study takes an ontogenetic approach as it makes different predictions for each theory and there is less research in this area. Methods for the study include a self-control measure along with three social cognition measures. The self-control measure is used as a non-social control to measure for general cognitive capacity. The social cognition measures include the “Impossible Toy” test, an object-choice task, and a gaze-following task. The results of the study will help to determine which theory of dogs’ social cognition better explains dogs’ strong socio-cognitive abilities in understanding humans.
format Text
author O'Shea, Kathleen
author_facet O'Shea, Kathleen
author_sort O'Shea, Kathleen
title Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
title_short Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
title_full Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
title_fullStr Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
title_full_unstemmed Effects Of Dogs' (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Environment On Social Cognition
title_sort effects of dogs' (canis lupus familiaris) environment on social cognition
publisher Digital Commons @ IWU
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/jwprc/2018/posters2/8
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source John Wesley Powell Student Research Conference
op_relation https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/jwprc/2018/posters2/8
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