PLOS
Inhibitory control may be an indicator of a dog's ability to solve a problem, according to a study published February 10, 2016 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Corsin Müller from the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna and colleagues.
Playing with objects may help dogs learn about their
environment, similar to how it helps human infants. Scientists think dogs'
inhibitory control, or the ability to inhibit or regulate attentional or
emotional responses, may play a role in their individual differences in
physical problem-solving task performance.
The authors of this study investigated the effects of pet dogs'
experiences interacting with the physical environment and their individual
differences in inhibitory control on their physical problem-solving ability.
A cohort of ~40 pet Border Collie dogs were assigned to three different conditions, and tested in an intensive series of inhibitory control tasks, such as wait-for-treat, and cognitive measures, such as size constancy over a period of 18 months.
The authors found that differences in previous object-related
experiences do not explain variability in performance in problem solving tasks.
Depending on the cognitive task, inhibitory control had a positive or a
negative effect on performance and turned out to be the best predictors of
individual performance in the different tasks.
The authors think that dogs
likely do not transfer knowledge about physical rules from one physical
problem-solving task to another, but rather approach each task as a novel
problem.
In addition, individual performance in these tasks may be influenced
by the subject's level of inhibitory control.
The authors suggest that studying the interplay between
inhibitory control and problem-solving performance may make an important
contribution to our understanding of individual and species differences in
physical problem-solving performance.