iScience (Jan 2024)

Some dogs can find the payoff-dominant outcome in the Assurance game

  • Mayte Martínez,
  • Selina Schöndorfer,
  • Lauren M. Robinson,
  • Sarah F. Brosnan,
  • Friederike Range

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
p. 108698

Abstract

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Summary: Studies on coordination often present animals with the choice of either cooperating or remaining inactive; however, in nature, animals may also choose to act alone. This can be modeled with the Assurance game, an economic game that has recently been used to explore decision-making in primates. We investigated whether dyads of pet dogs coordinate in the Assurance game. Pairs were presented with two alternatives: they could individually solve an apparatus baited with a low-value reward (Hare) or they could coordinate to solve a cooperative apparatus baited with a high-value reward for each dog (Stag). All individuals matched their partner’s choices, but after controlling for side bias, only four out of eleven dyads consistently coordinated on the payoff-dominant strategy (Stag-Stag). Thus, some dogs are capable of finding coordinated outcomes, as do primates, at least when their partner’s actions are visible and coordination results in the biggest payoff for both individuals.

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