| Literature DB >> 27866286 |
Aurelia Schuetz1, Kate Farmer2, Konstanze Krueger3,4.
Abstract
This study examines whether horses can learn by observing humans, given that they identify individual humans and orientate on the focus of human attention. We tested 24 horses aged between 3 and 12. Twelve horses were tested on whether they would learn to open a feeding apparatus by observing a familiar person. The other 12 were controls and received exactly the same experimental procedure, but without a demonstration of how to operate the apparatus. More horses from the group with demonstration (8/12) reached the learning criterion of opening the feeder twenty times consecutively than horses from the control group (2/12), and younger horses seemed to reach the criterion more quickly. Horses not reaching the learning criteria approached the human experimenters more often than those that did. The results demonstrate that horses learn socially across species, in this case from humans.Entities:
Keywords: Equus caballus; Human demonstrator; Interspecies-specific learning; Social enhancement; Social learning
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27866286 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-016-1060-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 3.084