| Literature DB >> 31363152 |
Nóra Bunford1,2, Barbara Csibra3, Márta Gácsi4,5.
Abstract
Cognitive biases, often used as indices of affective and emotional states, are associated with individual differences in personality in humans and have been observed in nonhuman animals, including dogs. Although dogs have complementary advantages over traditional animal models of human cognition, little is known about the relationship between dogs' cognitive bias and personality. Here, we examined in 29 family dogs (representing 14 breeds and 12 mutts; Mage = 4.59 years, SD = 2.90), the association between naturally occurring - as opposed to experimentally induced - cognitive bias, indexed via active choice behavior in a Go/No-Go (GNG) paradigm reflecting positive/negative expectations about ambiguous stimuli, and owner-rated personality. In a subsample we additionally assessed whether prior inhibition, personality, and inattention (IA)/hyperactivity/impulsivity (H/I) results could be replicated in a modified paradigm. We also explored whether expanding the response time-window would increase GNG errors and whether dogs exhibited differences in their behavioral approach to uncertainty. Findings indicated dogs with higher conscientiousness and extraversion scores were more likely to exhibit a "go" response to ambiguous stimuli. Replicability across prior and current results was generally established, e.g., as previously, IA did not predict GNG performance but extraversion did, whereas H/I predicted different indices of GNG performance. Increased response time-window did not result in differential performance, except for less commission errors. No differences in behavioral response strategy to trained "no-go" and to ambiguous stimuli were apparent. Results evince the dog is a promising animal model of the association between an optimistic cognitive bias and personality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31363152 PMCID: PMC6667502 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-47510-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Overview of testing and training phases across our earlier and current study with key details.
| 32 | Current study | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aim 1: Associations between personality, and positive/negative expectations about ambiguous stimuli | Exploratory Aim 1: Does longer time increase errors? ( | Exploratory Aim 2: Are there observable differences in behavioral approach to uncertainty? | ||||||
| Test/Training | GNG Test | MD GNG Test | Expanded Time-Window GNG Test | Expanded Time-Window MD GNG Test | ||||
| Time for responding | 3 s | 3 | 3 s | 3 | 5 s | 3 | 5 s | 3 |
| Session | 1 session | 4 sessions | 1 session | 2 sessions | ||||
| Stimuli | Go (12), No-Go (6) | Go (3), No-Go (3), Ambiguous (3-3) | Go (12), No-Go (6) | Go (3), No-Go (3), Ambiguous (3-3) | ||||
| Stimuli #/session | 2*20 | 12 | 2*20 | 12 | ||||
| Stimuli # in sum | 40 | 48 (12 Go, 12 No-Go, 24 Ambiguous) | 40 | 24 (6 Go, 6 No-Go, 12 Ambiguous) | ||||
| Sound feedback | No | Only after Go and No-Go stimuli | No | Only after Go and No-Go stimuli | ||||
Note. GNG = Go/No-Go; MD = modified; X session = as many sessions as needed to achieve performance criterion for moving on to the next phase, i.e., completing 20 stimuli in 2 subsequent sets with at least 80% accuracy.
aFirst training after the original GNG test to prepare dogs for MD GNG test. bStarting with the second MD GNG test session, before each test occasions, dogs received a refresher training as depicted. Dogs also received this refresher after the fourth test occasion, i.e., in-between the final MD GNG test session and the expanded time-window GNG test. cDogs received a refresher training after the expanded time-window GNG test, i.e., in-between the expanded time-window GNG test and the first expanded time-window MD GNG test session. dIn-between the first and second expanded time-window MD GNG test session, dogs received a refresher training as depicted. Dogs also received this refresher after the second test occasion.
Figure 1Experimental setup. Note. A version of this Figure also appears in (Bunford et al., 2018).
Dependent, independent, and covariate variables, grouped by aims.
| Aims | Dependent variables | Independent variables |
|---|---|---|
| Aim 1: Examine whether differences in canine personality is related to behaviors consistent with positive/negative expectations about ambiguous stimuli | - ambiguous “go” % - average latency of “go” responses to ambiguous stimuli | - personality - agea - sexa - training statusa |
| Aim 2: Determine whether earlier results regarding the association between Go/No-Go performance and ADHD-B/S can be replicated in the same sample, using a slightly modified experimental design | - omission error % - commission error % - average latency of correct “go” responses - average latency of commission errors | - personality - IA score - H/I score - agea - sexa - training statusa |
| Test variables | ||
| Exploratory aim 1: Determine, in a subsample, whether expanding the time window between stimulus onset and feedback (from 3 s to 5 s) would results in a wider range of errors | - Both from 32 and the current study - omission error % - commission error % - average latency of correct “go” responses - average latency of commission errors | |
| Exploratory aim 2: Evaluate the differences in behavioral response when uncertain about how to respond to No-Go and ambiguous stimuli | time-percentage of using each behavioral response preceding - “go” responses to ambiguous stimuli, - “no-go” responses to ambiguous stimuli - “no-go” responses to no-go stimuli | |
Note. aCovariates of non-interest.
ambiguous “go” % = the proportion of “go” response to ambiguous stimuli relative to the total number of ambiguous stimuli; average latency of “go” responses to ambiguous stimuli = the time, in ms, that has passed between ambiguous stimulus onset and execution of a “go” response; omission error % = the proportion of omission errors relative to the total number of “go” stimuli; commission error % = the proportion of commission errors relative to the total number of “no-go” stimuli, average latency of correct “go” responses = the time, in ms, that has passed between stimulus onset and execution of a correct “go” response; average latency of commission errors = the time, in ms, that has passed between stimulus onset and execution of a commission error.
Data on Individual Dogs Across the canine MD Go/No-Go Behavioral Inhibition Test Performance Variables.
| Name | OE% | CE% | Glat (ms) | Clat (ms) | Ambig go% | Ambig go lat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akina | 0,00 | 16,67 | 1593,58 | 3000,00 | 87,50 | 1362,56 |
| Alma | 0,00 | 0,00 | 802,58 | 3000,00 | 70,83 | 1054,50 |
| Barkus | 50,00 | 0,00 | 1169,38 | 3000,00 | 25,00 | 1011,75 |
| Bingó | 0,00 | 8,33 | 1164,75 | 718,00 | 91,67 | 989,23 |
| Bogyó | 8,33 | 16,67 | 1412,08 | 817,50 | 45,83 | 1096,83 |
| Borisz | 25,00 | 8,33 | 1585,21 | 266,00 | 41,67 | 1827,54 |
| Demi | 8,33 | 0,00 | 1046,50 | 3000,00 | 29,17 | 1762,00 |
| Dolores | 8,33 | 0,00 | 1057,54 | 3000,00 | 20,83 | 1330,42 |
| Döme | 16,67 | 16,67 | 1150,38 | 1472,50 | 62,50 | 1259,03 |
| Joker | 8,33 | 0,00 | 973,96 | 3000,00 | 70,83 | 1338,80 |
| Kitty | 8,33 | 0,00 | 875,04 | 3000,00 | 66,67 | 1139,55 |
| Kópé | 8,33 | 0,00 | 739,58 | 3000,00 | 41,67 | 794,75 |
| Leia | 8,33 | 33,33 | 1506,33 | 1636,50 | 66,67 | 1493,81 |
| Lili | 25,00 | 16,67 | 963,88 | 620,50 | 41,67 | 1277,71 |
| Liza | 25,00 | 25,00 | 1227,04 | 573,25 | 45,83 | 1193,19 |
| Lizi | 0,00 | 16,67 | 1233,50 | 1996,50 | 75,00 | 1168,23 |
| Lord | 0,00 | 0,00 | 1058,50 | 3000,00 | 37,50 | 1075,83 |
| Lucky | 0,00 | 16,67 | 1214,50 | 2367,00 | 33,33 | 1264,25 |
| Mara | 41,67 | 0,00 | 871,38 | 3000,00 | 54,17 | 1125,89 |
| Molly | 25,00 | 8,33 | 1171,71 | 799,00 | 79,17 | 1084,45 |
| Monty | 41,67 | 0,00 | 1315,79 | 3000,00 | 8,33 | 1817,00 |
| Öre | 25,00 | 25,00 | 906,88 | 1189,00 | 54,17 | 1101,35 |
| Pille | 8,33 | 25,00 | 911,13 | 1108,25 | 45,83 | 989,38 |
| Rozi | 0,00 | 16,67 | 1203,00 | 1336,50 | 70,83 | 1650,84 |
| Rynn | 8,33 | 25,00 | 1282,88 | 1681,67 | 54,17 | 1738,60 |
| Simon | 0,00 | 16,67 | 826,17 | 961,00 | 62,50 | 1187,84 |
| Vackor | 50,00 | 16,67 | 1635,88 | 1157,00 | 54,17 | 1531,23 |
| Zajec | 16,67 | 8,33 | 709,88 | 470,00 | 66,67 | 791,78 |
| Zebulon | 33,33 | 16,67 | 779,63 | 809,00 | 70,83 | 1130,71 |
Note. OE = omission error; CE = commission error; Glat = latency to correct go responses; Clat = latency to commission errors; Ambig go = “go” response to ambiguous stimulus; Colordiff go = “go” response to ambiguous stimulus different from “go” stimulus in color; Formdiff go = “go” response to ambiguous stimulus different from “go” stimulus in form.
Descriptive Statistics on Study Variables Across Four MD GNG Sessions Combined.
| range | min | max | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ambiguous “go” % | 83.34 | 8.33 | 91.67 | 54.31 (47.13; 61.62) |
| Ambiguous “go” latency | 1035.76 | 791.78 | 1827.54 | 1261.70 (1157.27; 1373.85) |
| Omission error % | 50.00 | 0.00 | 50.00 | 15.51 (10.63; 21.55) |
| Commission error % | 33.33 | 0.00 | 33.33 | 11.49 (8.04; 14.94) |
| Correct “go” latency (ms) | 926.00 | 709.88 | 1635.88 | 1116.84 (1025.84; 1211.33) |
| Commission error latency (ms) | 2734.00 | 266.00 | 3000.00 | 1826.87 (1443.50; 2214.62) |
Note. A one-way ANOVA indicated that mean latencies to correct “go”, commission error, and ambiguous “go” responses differed, F(2,84) = 10.122, p < 0.001, with LSD follow-up tests indicating a difference between latencies of correct “go” responses and commission errors (p < 0.001) and between commission errors and ambiguous “go” responses (p = 0.001) but no difference between correct “go” and ambiguous “go” responses (p = 0.388).
Figure 2Dogs’ average proportion of “go” (diagonal stripes) and “no-go” (dots) responses to ambiguous stimuli relative to the total number of ambiguous stimuli, presented for each session. Note. Error bars represent 1 SE of the mean.
Figure 3Dogs’ average proportion of errors and response latencies, given error and latency type, across the 3- and 5-s tests. Note. Error bars represent 1 SE of the mean. The data reported here for the 3 s window was also reported in (Bunford et al., 2018).
Figure 4Percentage of time spent using each behavioral approach of interest preceding responses to experimental stimuli. Note. In the Expanded Time-Window Modified Go/No-Go Test, dogs were presented with 2 sets of 12 stimuli (25% “go”, 25% “no-go”, and 25% ambiguous (in color) and 25% ambiguous (in shape) stimulus). The figures depict, for each dog, the proportion of time during which it executed each of four behavioral approaches of interest in each of four stimulus-response scenarios, i.e., (a) a correct “go” response to “go” stimuli, (b) a “go” response to ambiguous stimuli, (c) a correct “no-go” response to “no-go” stimuli, and (d) a “no-go” response to ambiguous stimuli. Behavioral approaches of interest are looking at person (green), the feeder (blue), at the stimulus (light brown) or something other than these (purple). Dogs had 5 s to respond after stimulus onset, and behavioral approaches were calculated for this 5 s time-window, as time-percentage. The numbers in brackets following dogs’ names represent the number of responses executed by the dog to the given stimuli. The descriptive statistics accompanying each of four figure elements represent the average duration (in ss) of each behavioral approach of interest, across dogs, in case of each of four scenarios.