Titel (eng)

Perceived reward attainability may underlie dogs' responses in inequity paradigms

Autor*in

Jim McGetrick   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Friederike Range   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Susanne Siegmann   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Romana Feitsch   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Hugo Peters   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Anna D. J. Korath   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Verlag

Nature Portfolio

Beschreibung (eng)

Dogs have been shown to give their paw to an experimenter more times for no reward when a rewarded conspecific partner is absent than when a rewarded conspecific is present, thereby showing inequity aversion. However, rather than being inequity averse, dogs might give their paw more when a partner is absent due to the experimenter's procedure in which they move food in front of the subject to mimic feeding a partner. This action could increase subjects' perception of reward attainability. We tested this hypothesis by introducing an improved type of control condition in which subjects were unrewarded for giving the paw in the presence of a rewarded box, a condition that more closely resembles the inequity condition. Inequity averse subjects' performance did not differ based on whether the partner was another dog or a box. Moreover, these subjects gave the paw more times when no partner was present and the experimenter mimicked the feeding of a partner than when rewards were placed in the box. These results suggest that responses in the previous studies were inflated by subjects' increased perception of reward attainability when no partner was present and, therefore, over-exaggerated dogs' propensity to give up due to inequity aversion.

Sprache des Objekts

Englisch

Datum

2023

Rechte

Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag
Dieses Werk bzw. dieser Inhalt steht unter einer
CC BY 4.0 - Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Lizenz.

CC BY 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Klassifikation

Capuchin Monkeys; Cebus-Apella; Aversion; Animacy; Chimpanzees; Perception; Refusal; Life; Apes

Mitglied in der/den Collection(s) (1)

o:605 Publikationen / Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien