| Literature DB >> 32591620 |
Claudia Fugazza1, Péter Pongrácz2, Ákos Pogány2, Rita Lenkei2, Ádám Miklósi2,3.
Abstract
We investigated whether dogs remember their spontaneous past actions relying on episodic-like memory. Dogs were trained to repeat a small set of actions upon request. Then we tested them on their ability to repeat other actions produced by themselves, including actions performed spontaneously in everyday situations. Dogs repeated their own actions after delays ranging from a few seconds to 1 hour, with their performance showing a decay typical of episodic memory. The combined evidence of representing own actions and using episodic-like memory to recall them suggests a far more complex representation of a key feature of the self than previously attributed to dogs. Our method is applicable to various species, paving the way for comparative investigations on the evolution and complexity of self-representation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32591620 PMCID: PMC7320188 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-67302-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Percentage of total trials in which dogs repeated their own actions in the different tests after various delays.
| Test condition | Expected or unexpected test | Delay between action of the dog and repeat command | Successful trials in repeating action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Expected | No delay | 84.2% |
| Untrained actions | Expected | No delay | 73.3% |
| Doing nothing | Exepcted | No delay | 90% |
| Clever Hans control | Expected | No delay | 100% |
| ‘Who is acting’ test | Expected | No delay | 88.3% |
| Spontaneous action | Unexpected | No delay | 70% |
| 20 s | 70% | ||
| 1 min | 60% | ||
| 1 h | 30% | ||
| Spontaneous object-action | Unexpected | No delay | 70% |
| 20 s | 70% | ||
| 1 min | 50% | ||
| 1 h | 40% | ||
| Spontaneous action control | Unexpected | Repeat command is not given | 0% |
| Spontaneous object-action control | Unxpected | Repeat command is not given | 0% |
| Different word control | Expected | No delay | 0 |
| Control for context | Unxpected | 20 s | 0 |
Figure 1Proportion of successfully repeated own actions or actions demonstrated by the owner in the Baseline repeat test (open circle) and in the ‘Who is acting’ test (filled symbols). The graph shows responses of the 10 dogs in different test conditions: in the Do it trials (Who-D; the owner demonstrated an action and gave the ‘do it’ command); in the repeat trials (Who-R; the owner asked the dog to perform a trained action and then gave the repeat command); and in the Do it + repeat trials (Who-DR; the owner demonstrated an action, gave the ‘do it’ command and, after the dog performed an action - i.e. imitated - gave the repeat command).
Figure 2Proportion of successfully repeated actions of 10 dogs in the different experimental conditions, including control tests. Open circles represent the Baseline condition (BL-R), in which the dog was asked to repeat actions that were used during the Repeat training. On panel a), success rates during the Spontaneous action test (SA-R, black filled circles) and two corresponding control tests: the Spontaneous action control (when no command was issued but the dog was let free again in the test area; SA-C, black diamond) and the Different word control (when instead of repeat, a different word was said; SA-W, black triangle) are illustrated. On panel b), success rates during the Spontaneous object-action test (SOA-R, black filled circles) and the Spontaneous action control (when no command was issued; SOA-C, black diamond) are illustrated. In the two Spontaneous repeat tests (SA-R and SOA-R) dogs were tested with different delays (0 sec, 20 sec, 1 min, 1 h) between their spontaneous action and requesting to recall and repeat it.