
doi: 10.1037/a0030595
pmid: 23106804
Recent evidence suggests that phylogenetic constraints exerted on dogs by the process of domestication have altered the ability of dogs to represent the physical world and the displacement of objects. In this study, invisible (Experiment 1) and visible (Experiment 2) displacement problems were administered to determine whether domestic dogs' and gray wolves' cognitive capacities to infer the position of a hidden object differ. The results revealed that adult dogs and wolves performed similarly in searching for disappearing objects: Both species succeeded the visible displacement tasks but failed the invisible displacement problems. We conclude that physical cognition for finding hidden objects in domestic dogs and gray wolves is alike and unrelated to the process of domestication.
Male, Wolves, Behavior, Animal, Neuropsychological Tests, Dogs, Animals, Domestic, Space Perception, Animals, Female, Phylogeny, Problem Solving
Male, Wolves, Behavior, Animal, Neuropsychological Tests, Dogs, Animals, Domestic, Space Perception, Animals, Female, Phylogeny, Problem Solving
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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