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Puppies in the problem-solving paradigm: quick males and social females

Authors :
Claudia Pinelli
Anna Scandurra
Alfredo Di Lucrezia
Massimo Aria
Gün R. Semin
Biagio D’Aniello
Pinelli, Claudia
Scandurra, Anna
Di Lucrezia, Alfredo
Aria, Massimo
Semin, Gün R
D'Aniello, Biagio
Source :
Animal Cognition. 26:791-797
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

We report an observational, double-blind study that examined puppies’ behaviors while engaged in solving an experimental food retrieval task (food retrieval task instrument: FRTI). The experimental setting included passive social distractors (i.e., the dog’s owner and a stranger). The focus was on how the social and physical environment shapes puppies’ behaviors according to sex. The dependent variables were the number of tasks solved on an apparatus (Performance Index) and the time required to solve the first task (Speed). Sex and Stress were set as explanatory factors, and Social Interest, FRTI interactions, other behavior, and age as covariates. The main findings were that male puppies solved the first task faster than females. On the other hand, females displayed significantly more social interest and did so more rapidly than males. Males showed delayed task resolution. This study demonstrates sex differences in a problem-solving task in dog puppies for the first time, thus highlighting that sexually dimorphic behavioral differences in problem-solving strategies develop early on during ontogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
14359456 and 14359448
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Animal Cognition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....acfac4aa602b2a7e7bbadd2e87b6ce0e