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Author |
Christensen, J.W.; Ahrendt, L.P.; Lintrup, R.; Gaillard, C.; Palme, R.; Malmkvist, J. |
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Title |
Does learning performance in horses relate to fearfulness, baseline stress hormone, and social rank? |
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Abstract |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Applied Animal Behaviour Science |
Abbreviated Journal |
App Anim Behav Sci |
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140 |
Issue |
1 |
Pages |
44-52 |
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Keywords |
Horse; Learning; Fearfulness; Stress; Reinforcement; Social rank |
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Abstract |
The ability of horses to learn and remember new tasks is fundamentally important for their use by humans. Fearfulness may, however, interfere with learning, because stimuli in the environment can overshadow signals from the rider or handler. In addition, prolonged high levels of stress hormones can affect neurons within the hippocampus; a brain region central to learning and memory. In a series of experiments, we aimed to investigate the link between performance in two learning tests, the baseline level of stress hormones, measured as faecal cortisol metabolites (FCM), fearfulness, and social rank. Twenty-five geldings (2 or 3 years old) pastured in one group were included in the study. The learning tests were performed by professional trainers and included a number of predefined stages during which the horses were gradually trained to perform exercises, using either negative (NR) or positive reinforcement (PR). Each of the learning tests lasted 3 days; 7min/horse/day. The NR test was repeated in a novel environment. Performance, measured as final stage in the training programme, and heart rate (HR) were recorded. Faeces were collected on four separate days where the horses had been undisturbed at pasture for 48h. Social rank was determined through observations of social interactions during feeding. The fear test was a novel object test during which behaviour and HR were recorded. Performance in the NR and PR learning tests did not correlate. In the NR test, there was a significant, negative correlation between performance and HR in the novel environment (rS=-0.66, P<0.001, i.e. nervous horses had reduced performance), whereas there was no such correlation in the home environment (both NR and PR). Behavioural reactions in the fear test correlated significantly with performance in the NR test in the novel environment (e.g. object alertness and final stage: rS=-0.43, P=0.04), suggesting that performance under unfamiliar, stressful conditions may be predicted by behavioural responses in a fear test. There was a negative correlation between social rank and baseline stress hormones (rS=-0.43, P=0.04), i.e. high rank corresponded to low FCM concentrations, whereas neither rank nor FCM correlated with fearfulness or learning performance. We conclude that performance under stressful conditions is affected by activation of the sympathetic nervous system during training and related to behavioural responses in a standardised fear test. Learning performance in the home environment, however, appears unrelated to fearfulness, social rank and baseline FCM levels. |
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0168-1591 |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ S0168-1591(12)00168-2 |
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5769 |
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Author |
Feh, C. |
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Title |
Relationships and Communication in Socially Natural Horse Herds |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2005 |
Publication |
The domestic horse : the origins, development, and management of its behaviour |
Abbreviated Journal |
The domestic horse : the origins, development, and management of its behaviour |
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Horses are quite unique. In most mammals, sexes segregate and maintain bonds only during the breeding season (Clutton-Brock, 1989). Some canids, a few rodents and primate species such as gorillas, hamadryas baboons and red howler monkeys are the exception, where the same males stay with the same females all year round and over many breeding seasons. Typically, both sexes disperse at puberty in these species. In horses, it was clearly shown that the causes for female dispersal were incest avoidance and not intra-specific competition (Monard, 1996). As a rule, this is confirmed for mammal species where tenure length by males exceeds the age at first reproduction in females (Clutton-Brock, 1989). When horses are allowed to choose their mating partner freely, the inbreeding coefficient of the offspring is lower than expected should they mate randomly (Duncan et al, 1984). |
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Cambridge University Press 2005 |
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Cambridge |
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Mills, D. S. ; McDonnell, , S. M. |
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13 978-0-521-81414-6 |
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refbase @ user @; Equine Behaviour @ team @ room B 3.092 |
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472 |
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Author |
Nicol, C.J |
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Title |
Equine Stereotypies. In: Houpt K.A. (Ed.), |
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2000 |
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Recent Advances in Companion Animal Behavior Problems |
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International Veterinary Information Service |
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refbase @ user @ |
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477 |
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Author |
Allen, C. |
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Title |
Transitive inference in animals: Reasoning or conditioned associations? |
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Year |
2006 |
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Rational Animals? |
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175-186 |
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It is widely accepted that many species of nonhuman animals appear to engage in transitive inference,
producing appropriate responses to novel pairings of non-adjacent members of an ordered series
without previous experience of these pairings. Some researchers have taken this capability as
providing direct evidence that these animals reason. Others resist such declarations, favouring instead
explanations in terms of associative conditioning. Associative accounts of transitive inference have
been refined in application to a simple 5-element learning task that is the main paradigm for
laboratory investigations of the phenomenon, but it remains unclear how well those accounts
generalise to more information-rich environments such as social hierarchies which may contain scores
of individuals, and where rapid learning is important. The case of transitive inference is an example of
a more general dispute between proponents of associative accounts and advocates of more cognitive
accounts of animal behaviour. Examination of the specific details of transitive inference suggests
some lessons for the wider debate. |
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Texas A&M University |
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Oxford University Press |
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Oxford |
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Hurley, S.; Nudds, M. |
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978-0-19-852827-2 |
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refbase @ user @ |
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611 |
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Author |
Packer, C.; Pusey, A. E. |
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Title |
Asymmetric contests in social mammals: respect, manipulation and age-specific aspects |
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Year |
1985 |
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Evolution: Essays in Honour of John Maynard Smith |
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173-86 |
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Camebridge University Press |
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Camebridge |
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Greenwood, P.J.; Slatkin, M.; |
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refbase @ user @ |
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819 |
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Author |
Pusey, A. E.; Packer, C. |
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Title |
The Ecology of relationships |
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Year |
2003 |
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Behavioural Ecology |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Ecol. |
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254 -283 |
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Blackwell Scientific Publication |
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Oxford |
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Krebs, J.R.; Davis, N.B.; |
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refbase @ user @ |
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820 |
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Author |
Dyer, F.C. |
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Title |
Spatial Cognition: Lessons from Central-place Foraging Insects |
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1998 |
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Animal Cognition in Nature |
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119-154 |
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Summary Spatial orientation has played an extremely important role in the development of ideas about the behavioral capacities of animals. Indeed, as the modern scientific study of animal behavior emerged from its roots in zoology and experimental psychology, studies of spatial orientation figured in the work of many of the pioneering researchers, including Tinbergen (), von ), Watson () and . |
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Academic Press |
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London |
Editor |
Russell P. Balda; Irene M. Pepperberg; Alan C. Kamil |
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9780120770304 |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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2913 |
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Author |
Beer, C.G. |
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Title |
Varying Views of Animal and Human Cognition |
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1998 |
Publication |
Animal Cognition in Nature |
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435-456 |
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Summary In this chapter I want to stand back from the splendid empirical work on animal cognitive capacities that is the focus of this book, and look at the broader context of cognitive concerns within which the work can be viewed. Indeed even the term `cognitive ethology' currently connotes and denotes more than is represented here, as other collections of articles, such as and , exemplify. I include the current descendants of behavioristic learning theory, evolutionary epistemology, evolutionary psychology and the recent comparative turn that has been taken in cognitive science. These several approaches, despite their considerable overlap, often appear independent and even ignorant of one another. Like the proverbial blind men feeling the hide of an elephant, they touch hands from time to time, yet collectively have only a piecemeal and distributed understanding of the shape of the whole. Although each approach may indeed need the space to work out its own conceptual and methodological preoccupations without confounding interference from other views, a utopian spirit envisages an ultimate coming together, a more comprehensive realization of the synthetic approach to animal cognition that is this book's theme. |
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Academic Press |
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London |
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Russell P. Balda; Irene M. Pepperberg; Alan C. Kamil |
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9780120770304 |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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2915 |
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Author |
Wingfield, J. C.,; Ramenofsky, M. |
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Title |
Hormones and the behavioral ecology of stress. |
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1999 |
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Stress physiology in animals. |
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1-51 |
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Sheffield Academic Press |
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Sheffield, United Kingdom |
Editor |
Balm, P. H. M. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
Serial |
4071 |
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Author |
Kamil, A.C. |
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Title |
On the Proper Definition of Cognitive Ethology |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
1998 |
Publication |
Animal Cognition in Nature |
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1-28 |
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Summary The last 20-30 years have seen two `scientific revolutions' in the study of animal behavior: the cognitive revolution that originated in psychology, and the Darwinian, behavioral ecology revolution that originated in biology. Among psychologists, the cognitive revolution has had enormous impact. Similarly, among biologists, the Darwinian revolution has had enormous impact. The major theme of this chapter is that these two scientific research programs need to be combined into a single approach, simultaneously cognitive and Darwinian, and that this single approach is most appropriately called cognitive ethology. |
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Academic Press |
Place of Publication |
London |
Editor |
Russell P. Balda; Irene M. Pepperberg; Alan C. Kamil |
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9780120770304 |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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4202 |
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