Domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) perform above chance on invisible displacement tasks despite showing few other signs of possessing the necessary representational abilities. Four experiments investigated how dogs find an object that has been hidden in 1 of 3 opaque boxes. Dogs passed the task under a variety of control conditions, but only if the device used to displace the object ended up adjacent to the target box after the displacement. These results suggest that the search behavior of dogs was guided by simple associative rules rather than mental representation of the object's past trajectory. In contrast, Experiment 5 found that on the same task, 18- and 24-month-old children showed no disparity between trials in which the displacement...
Numerous recent studies have investigated how animals solve means-end tasks and unraveled considerab...
Dogs can use the placement of an arbitrary marker to locate hidden food in an object-choice situatio...
In a series of four experiments we investigated whether dogs use information about a human's visual ...
Visible and invisible displacement tasks have been used widely for comparative studies of animals’ u...
The Piagetian invisible displacement task has been used extensively in the field of comparative cogn...
Visually tracking a moving object, even if it becomes temporarily invisible, is an important skill f...
International audienceA key question in the field of animal cognition is how animals comprehend thei...
Many argue that dogs show unique susceptibility to human communicative signals that make them suitab...
Great apes but not monkeys solve the invisible displacement task under conditions controlling for as...
Visually tracking a moving object, even if it becomes temporarily invisible, is an important skill f...
It has been suggested that domestic dogs-like young human children-have a "gravity bias"; they expec...
The present study looked at the effect external cues have on dogs performance during object permanen...
Previous research suggests that chimpanzees understand single invisible displacement. However, this ...
Shannon M. A. Kundey, Chelsea Taglang, Ayelet Baruch, and Rebecca German, Department of Psychology, ...
Physical reasoning appears central to understanding how the world works, suggesting adaptive functio...
Numerous recent studies have investigated how animals solve means-end tasks and unraveled considerab...
Dogs can use the placement of an arbitrary marker to locate hidden food in an object-choice situatio...
In a series of four experiments we investigated whether dogs use information about a human's visual ...
Visible and invisible displacement tasks have been used widely for comparative studies of animals’ u...
The Piagetian invisible displacement task has been used extensively in the field of comparative cogn...
Visually tracking a moving object, even if it becomes temporarily invisible, is an important skill f...
International audienceA key question in the field of animal cognition is how animals comprehend thei...
Many argue that dogs show unique susceptibility to human communicative signals that make them suitab...
Great apes but not monkeys solve the invisible displacement task under conditions controlling for as...
Visually tracking a moving object, even if it becomes temporarily invisible, is an important skill f...
It has been suggested that domestic dogs-like young human children-have a "gravity bias"; they expec...
The present study looked at the effect external cues have on dogs performance during object permanen...
Previous research suggests that chimpanzees understand single invisible displacement. However, this ...
Shannon M. A. Kundey, Chelsea Taglang, Ayelet Baruch, and Rebecca German, Department of Psychology, ...
Physical reasoning appears central to understanding how the world works, suggesting adaptive functio...
Numerous recent studies have investigated how animals solve means-end tasks and unraveled considerab...
Dogs can use the placement of an arbitrary marker to locate hidden food in an object-choice situatio...
In a series of four experiments we investigated whether dogs use information about a human's visual ...