| Literature DB >> 29332229 |
Yuko Ishikawa1, Daniel Mills1, Alexander Willmott2, David Mullineaux2, Kun Guo3.
Abstract
Preferential attention to living creatures is believed to be an intrinsic capacity of the visual system of several species, with perception of biological motion often studied and, in humans, it correlates with social cognitive performance. Although domestic dogs are exceptionally attentive to human social cues, it is unknown whether their sociability is associated with sensitivity to conspecific and heterospecific biological motion cues of different social relevance. We recorded video clips of point-light displays depicting a human or dog walking in either frontal or lateral view. In a preferential looking paradigm, dogs spontaneously viewed 16 paired point-light displays showing combinations of normal/inverted (control condition), human/dog and frontal/lateral views. Overall, dogs looked significantly longer at frontal human point-light display versus the inverted control, probably due to its clearer social/biological relevance. Dogs' sociability, assessed through owner-completed questionnaires, further revealed that low-sociability dogs preferred the lateral point-light display view, whereas high-sociability dogs preferred the frontal view. Clearly, dogs can recognize biological motion, but their preference is influenced by their sociability and the stimulus salience, implying biological motion perception may reflect aspects of dogs' social cognition.Entities:
Keywords: Biological motion; Canis familiaris; Sociability; Social relevance; Viewing perspective
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29332229 PMCID: PMC5818592 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-018-1160-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 3.084
Fig. 1Examples of point-light display combinations: 1 frontal human upright versus frontal human inverted, 2 lateral human upright versus lateral human inverted, 3 frontal dog upright versus frontal dog inverted, 4 lateral dog upright versus lateral dog inverted, 5 frontal human upright versus frontal dog upright, 6 lateral human upright versus lateral dog upright, 7 frontal human upright versus lateral human upright, 8 frontal dog upright versus lateral dog upright
Fig. 2Experimental set-up and an example of testing combination (frontal human upright vs lateral human upright)
Fig. 3Minimum − maximum PP range (with circles as outliers) for two point-light displays in each testing combination. Lower, middle and upper lines in each box represent 25th, median and 75th percentiles of PP. FHU frontal human upright, FHI frontal human inverted, LHU lateral human upright, LHI lateral human inverted, FDU frontal dog upright, FDI frontal dog inverted, LDU lateral dog upright, LDI lateral dog inverted. *p < 0.05
Comparison between low and high-sociability groups towards humans (A) and dogs (B)
| (A) | Low human sociability | High human sociability | Low versus high |
|---|---|---|---|
| FHU/FHI | 34/16% ( | 29/10% ( | 0.17/0.70 |
| LHU/LHI | 24/13% ( | 4/29% ( | |
| FHU/FDU | 28/20% ( | 24/23% ( | 0.74/0.96 |
| LHU/LDU | 14/26% ( | 4/7% ( | 0.33/0.14 |
| FHU/LHU | 15/28% ( | 8/8% ( | 0.54/0.16 |
p values in bold indicate p < 0.05
FHU frontal human upright, FHI frontal human inverted, LHU lateral human upright, LHI lateral human inverted, FDU frontal dog upright, FDI frontal dog inverted, LDU lateral dog upright, LDI lateral dog inverted
aTwo-tailed Wilcoxon signed-ranks test two-tailed, btwo-tailed Mann–Whitney U test between high- and low-sociability group for each point-light display, cbased on positive ranks, dbased on negative ranks, ethe sum of negative ranks equals the sum of positive ranks