University of Padua

Visual continuum in non-human animals: Serial dependence revealed in dogs

Loõke, Miina and Guerineau, Cecile and Broseghini, Anna and Mongillo, Paolo and Marinelli, Lieta (2024) Visual continuum in non-human animals: Serial dependence revealed in dogs. [Data Collection]

Collection description

Serial dependence is a recently described phenomenon by which the perceptual evaluation of a stimulus is biased by a previously attended one. By integrating stimuli over time, serial dependence is believed to ensure a stable conscious experience. Despite increasing studies in humans, it's unknown if the process occurs also in other species. Here, we assessed whether serial dependence occurs in dogs. To this aim, dogs were trained on a quantity discrimination task before being presented with a discrimination where one of the discriminanda was preceded by a task-irrelevant stimulus. If dogs are susceptible to serial dependence, the task-irrelevant stimulus was hypothesized to influence the perception of the subsequently presented quantity. Our results revealed that dogs perceived the currently presented quantity to be closer to the one presented briefly before, in accordance with serial dependence. The direction and strength of the effect were comparable to those observed in humans. Data regarding dogs’ attention during the task suggest that dogs used two different quantity estimation mechanisms, an indication of a higher cognitive mechanism involved in the process. The present results are the first empirical evidence that serial dependence extends beyond humans, suggesting that the mechanism is shared by phylogenetically distant mammals.

DOI: 10.25430/researchdata.cab.unipd.it.00001296
Keywords: Serial Dependence, Visual perception, Dog, Attractive bias, Quantity perception
Subjects: Life Sciences > Neuroscience and Neural Disorders: Neural cell function and signalling, systems neuroscience, neural bases of cognitive and behavioural processes, neurological and psychiatric disorders > Neural bases of cognitive processes (e.g. memory, learning, attention)
Department: Departments > Dipartimento di Biomedicina comparata e alimentazione (BCA)
Depositing User: Miina Lõoke
Date Deposited: 03 Jun 2024 12:31
Last Modified: 03 Jun 2024 12:31
Creators/Authors:
CreatorsEmailORCID
Loõke, Miinamiina.looke@unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0002-3981-1551
Guerineau, Cecilececilechantalcatherine.guerineau@phd.unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0002-2283-1302
Broseghini, Annaanna.broseghini@phd.unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0002-8795-6237
Mongillo, Paolopaolo.mongillo@unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0001-8599-4005
Marinelli, Lietalieta.marinelli@unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0003-0609-2172
Type of data: Text
Contributors:
ContributionNameEmail
AuthorUNSPECIFIEDUNSPECIFIED
Collection period:
FromTo
September 2021November 2022
Resource language: English
Metadata language: English
Publisher: Research Data Unipd
Date: 3 June 2024
Copyright holders: The Author
URI: https://researchdata.cab.unipd.it/id/eprint/1296

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