Madsen, E. A. & Persson, T. (2012) Contagious yawning in domestic
dog puppies (Canis lupus familiaris): The effect of ontogeny and
emotional closeness on low-level imitation in dogs. Animal Cognition
Press release Link to journal Paper (uncorrected proof)
Abstract:
Contagious yawning is a well-documented phenomenon in
humans and has recently attracted much attention from developmental and
comparative sciences. The function, development and underlying
mechanisms of the phenomenon, however, remain largely unclear.
Contagious yawning has been demonstrated in dogs and several non-human
primate species, and theoretically and empirically associated with
empathy in humans and non-human primates. Evidence of emotional
closeness modulating contagious yawning in dogs has, nonetheless, been
contradictory. Humans show a developmental increase in susceptibility
to yawn contagion, with typically developing children displaying a
substantial increase at the age of four, when a number of cognitive
abilities (e.g. accurate identification of others’ emotions) begin to
clearly manifest. Explicit tests of yawn contagion in non-human animals
have, however, thus far only involved adult individuals. Here, we
report a study of the ontogeny of domestic dogs’ (Canis lupus
familiaris) susceptibility to yawn contagion, and whether
emotional closeness to the yawning model affects this. Thirty-five
dogs, aged 4–14 months, observed a familiar and unfamiliar human
repeatedly yawn or gape. The dogs yawned contagiously, but emotional
closeness with the model did not affect the strength of
contagion, raising questions as to recent evidence of emotionally
modulated auditory contagious yawning in dogs. The dogs showed a
developmental effect, with only dogs above 7 months evidencing
contagion. The results support the notion of a developmental increase
in dogs’ attention to others and identification of others’ emotional
states and suggest that yawn contagion is underpinned by developmental
processes shared by humans and other animals.
|