{"@context":{"aiiso":"http:\/\/purl.org\/vocab\/aiiso\/schema#","arm":"https:\/\/ld4p.github.io\/arm\/core\/ontology\/0.1\/","bf":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/ontologies\/bibframe\/","bib":"https:\/\/bibliotek-o.org\/","bibo":"http:\/\/purl.org\/ontology\/bibo\/","cito":"http:\/\/purl.org\/spar\/cito\/","classSchemes":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/classSchemes","dbo":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/ontology\/","dce":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/","dcmitype":"http:\/\/dublincore.org\/documents\/2000\/07\/11\/dcmi-type-vocabulary\/#","dcterms":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/","ebucore":"http:\/\/www.ebu.ch\/metadata\/ontologies\/ebucore\/ebucore","edm":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/","foaf":"http:\/\/xmlns.com\/foaf\/spec\/#","frap":"http:\/\/purl.org\/cerif\/frapo","identifiers":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/identifiers","ids":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/identifiers\/","opaque":"http:\/\/opaquenamespace.org\/","pcdm":"http:\/\/pcdm.org\/models#","phaidra":"https:\/\/phaidra.org\/ontology\/","rdam":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/m\/","rdau":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/u\/","rdax":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/x\/","rdf":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/1999\/02\/22-rdf-syntax-ns#","rdfs":"https:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/rdf-schema\/","relators":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/relators","role":{"@context":{"aut":{"@container":"@list","@id":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/relators\/aut"}}},"schema":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","skos":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2004\/02\/skos\/core#","skosxl":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2008\/05\/skos-xl"},"@id":"https:\/\/phaidra.vetmeduni.ac.at\/o:4577","bf:note":[{"@type":"bf:Note","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Dataset for the test phase of the preprint:\n\nDániel Rivas-Blanco, Lou Gonnet-dit-Revel, Friederike Range, Sabine Tebbich, Sarah Marshall-Pescini. Neophilia in wolves and dogs. bioRxiv 2025.04.24.650376 doi.org\/10.1101\/2025.04.24.650376 (Note: This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review - verified on: 2025-11-21)"}]},{"@type":"bf:Note","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Each row of the dataset represents a trial. The columns, from left to right, are as follows: session_id (ID of the session), date (date of the session in dd\/mm\/yyyy format), subject (name of the subject), session (number of test session for a given subject), species (\"Wolf\" or \"Dog\"), population (\"pack\" or \"pet\"; \"pet\" only applies to dogs), old_item (identity of the familiar item), new_item (identity of the new item), pair (code for the familiar-new item pair the item used for exposure belongs to), experimenter (experimenter that led the session), enclosure (enclosure in which the animal was tested), sex (\"m\" or \"f\"), age_days (number of days that passed between the birth of the animal and the session, first_approach (item that was first approached —within 2 body lengths), first_touched (item that was touched first), item_closer (identity of the item that was closer to the entrance to the enclosure from which the animals were shifted in), latency_new (time in seconds the animal needed to approach the new object), int-dur_old (time in seconds the animal interacted with the familiar object), int-dur_new (time in seconds the animal interacted with the new object), distance_old (distance in meters between the entrance of the enclosure and the familiar item), distance_new (distance in meters between the entrance of the enclosure and the new item), and notes."}]}],"dce:subject":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"wolves"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"dogs"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"neophilia"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"neophobia"}]}],"dce:title":[{"@type":"bf:Title","bf:mainTitle":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Dataset for the test phase of \"Neophilia in wolves and dogs\""}]}],"dcterms:language":["eng"],"dcterms:type":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/pid.phaidra.org\/vocabulary\/7AVS-Y482"],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Data"},{"@language":"deu","@value":"Daten"},{"@language":"ita","@value":"Dati"}]}],"ebucore:filename":["neophilia_test.csv"],"ebucore:hasMimeType":["text\/csv"],"edm:hasType":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/pid.phaidra.org\/vocabulary\/KW6N-2VTP"],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"dataset"},{"@language":"deu","@value":"Dataset"},{"@language":"ita","@value":"Dataset"}]}],"edm:rights":["http:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/4.0\/"],"frapo:isOutputOf":[{"@type":"foaf:Project","frapo:hasEndDate":["2025-06-30"],"frapo:hasFundingAgency":[{"@type":"frapo:FundingAgency","skos:exactMatch":[{"@type":"ids:doi","@value":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.13039\/501100002428"}],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"FWF Austrian Science Fund"}]}],"frapo:hasStartDate":["2021-01-01"],"rdfs:comment":[{"@language":"deu","@value":"Problemlösungsfähigkeiten ermöglicht es Tieren auf artenspezifische Herausforderungen ihrer Umwelt zu reagieren. Nicht überraschend, scheinen sich Hunde und Wölfe, die sehr nahe miteinander verwandt sind, aber in unterschiedlichen ökologischen Nischen leben, in dieser Hinsicht zu unterscheiden. Allerdings ist nicht klar, ob diese Unterschiede durch unterschiedliche kognitive Fähigkeiten (z.B. kausales Verständnis), Motivation (z.B. Beharrlichkeit und Angst vor Neuem) oder allgemeinere Merkmale (z.B. Aufmerksamkeit, Arbeitsgedächtnis) zustande kommen. In diesem Projekt werden wir Wölfe und Hunde, die die gleichen Erfahrungen haben (Wolf Science Center), aber auch Haushunde und freilaufende Hunde, in einer Reihe von Experimenten untersuchen. Die gleichaufgezogenen Wölfe und Hunde geben uns die Möglichkeit zu untersuchen, ob es durch die Domestikation zu wirklichen Unterschieden in den Fähigkeiten zwischen den Tieren gekommen ist; der Vergleich zwischen den verschiedenen Hundepopulationen erlaubt uns zu beurteilen, in wieweit Erfahrung diese Fähigkeiten beeinflusst. In den Experimenten werden wir zum einen die Motivation der Tiere testen, verschiedenen Aufgaben zu bewältigen, aber auch ihr kausales Verständnis und ihre Aufmerksamkeit gegenüber Details bzw. ihr Arbeitsgedächtnis. Mit der Ergebnissen können wir die Hypothese evaluieren, ob der unterschiedliche Lebensraum vom Wolf (ein kooperativer Jäger der in engen Familiengruppen lebt) und Hund (durch die Domestikation angepasst an den Lebensraum des Menschen) die Problemlösefähigkeiten beeinflusst hat, oder ob, durch die relativ kurze Zeitspanne seit der Domestizierung, Hunde prinzipiell noch dieselben Fähigkeiten haben, wie die Wölfe. Das Kernteam bilden Associate Univ.-Prof. Dr. Friederike Range, Gründerin und Leiterin des Wolf Science Centers und Priv. Doz. Dr. Sarah Marshall-Pescini, eine hochrangige Wissenschaftlerin, die eng mit Range in Bezug zu Hundekognition und Domestizierungsprozesse zusammenarbeitet, sowie Priv. Doz. Dr. Sabine Tebbich, Postdoktorandin an der Universität Wien, deren Expertise in der physischen Wahrnehmung verschiedener Tierarten liegt."}],"skos:exactMatch":[{"@type":"ids:doi","@value":"10.55776\/P33928"}],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Proximate mechanisms underlying problem solving abilities"}]}],"rdam:P30004":[{"@type":"ids:doi","@value":"10.34876\/4er6-tj69"}],"role:aut":[{"@type":"schema:Person","schema:familyName":[{"@value":"Rivas-Blanco"}],"schema:givenName":[{"@value":"Dániel"}],"skos:exactMatch":[{"@type":"ids:orcid","@value":"0000-0002-3759-7192"}]}]}