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OPEN Dogs accurately track a moving object on a screen and anticipate its destination

Veterinary Science

OPEN Dogs accurately track a moving object on a screen and anticipate its destination

C. J. Völter, S. Karl, et al.

This fascinating study by Christoph J. Völter, Sabrina Karl, and Ludwig Huber explores how dogs track motion and anticipate actions using eye-tracking technology. Discover how dogs remained glued to a Frisbee, predicting its movement, and reacted differently to surprising video edits. This research opens exciting possibilities for understanding canine cognition!... show more
Abstract
The prediction of upcoming events is of importance not only to humans and non-human primates but also to other animals that live in complex environments with lurking threats or moving prey. In this study, we examined motion tracking and anticipatory looking in dogs in two eye-tracking experiments. In Experiment 1, we presented pet dogs (N = 14) with a video depicting how two players threw a Frisbee back and forth multiple times. The horizontal movement of the Frisbee explained a substantial amount of variance of the dogs' horizontal eye movements. With increasing duration of the video, the dogs looked at the catcher before the Frisbee arrived. In Experiment 2, we showed the dogs (N = 12) the same video recording. This time, however, we froze and rewound parts of the video to examine how the dogs would react to surprising events (i.e., the Frisbee hovering in midair and reversing its direction). The Frisbee again captured the dogs' attention, particularly when the video was frozen and rewound for the first time. Additionally, the dogs looked faster at the catcher when the video moved forward compared to when it was rewound. We conclude that motion tracking and anticipatory looking paradigms provide promising tools for future cognitive research with canids.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 16, 2020
Authors
Christoph J. Völter, Sabrina Karl, Ludwig Huber
Tags
motion tracking
anticipatory looking
eye-tracking experiments
canine cognition
Frisbee
video movement
attention
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