Step Aside! Assessing Body Awareness In Pigs Using A Body-As-An-Obstacle Task

Body awareness allows animals to perceive their own body as a tool or even as obstacle when interacting with their environment. Body-as-an-obstacle tasks have been employed to test body awareness in human infants, elephants, and dogs. Investigating body awareness in a farm animal species for the fir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kimberly Brosche, Jim McGetrick, Jean-Loup Rault
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Animal Behavior and Cognition 2025-05-01
Series:Animal Behavior and Cognition
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Online Access:https://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/62/2%20Brosche_et_al_ABC_12(2).pdf
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Summary:Body awareness allows animals to perceive their own body as a tool or even as obstacle when interacting with their environment. Body-as-an-obstacle tasks have been employed to test body awareness in human infants, elephants, and dogs. Investigating body awareness in a farm animal species for the first time, we tested young domestic pigs (Sus scrofus domesticus, N=17, 8 male and 9 female, 7 weeks old) in a modified body-as-an-obstacle task. Pigs learned to push a sliding panel with their snout to access food rewards. This was achievable from two different positions: left or right, corresponding to on or off a mat. In the test condition, the mat on which pigs were positioned was attached to the panel via a chain. If body-aware, pigs were expected, after unsuccessfully trying from the mat side, to step off the mat and push from the other side. Subjects stepped off the mat and solved 52% of the "attached" trials. Additionally, they were significantly quicker, and more likely, to push from the other side after stepping off in a newly introduced control condition, in which the panel was blocked for a reason unknown to the pig, did not differ significantly from that in the attached condition. Hence, similar to previously tesed species, pigs can flexibly adjust their behavior to solve a body-as-an-obstacle task. Importantly, our findings also highlight the necessity of determining whether animals simply switch statregies and, thereby, succeed in body-as-an-obstacle tasks whenever they cannot identify the reason for the obstruction, or whether their sccuess indeed constitutes evidence for body awareness.
ISSN:2372-4323