This reminds me a bit of the some of the problem solving experiments done comparing pet dogs to undomesticated wolves. The experiment wasn't overly complicated, a piece of meat was placed in a locked cage and the animals were given free reign to try their paws at getting to the food. The wolves were persistent, some employed tools like sticks to push the food out, some managed to navigate the clasping mechanism on the cage. The domesticated dogs more often than not quickly gave up and looked to the human present for help.
araes|2 years ago
"The wolves generally attacked each puzzle immediately upon release from the start box and persisted until either the problem was solved or time had run out. In contrast, the malamutes investigated puzzle boxes only until they discovered that the food was not easily accessible, after which they typically returned to the start box and performed a variety of solicitation and begging gestures toward Experimenter 1."
There's a couple others that have followed on that are kind of neat to and related. Marshall-Pescini, et al. looked at wolves and dogs ability to play shell games, recognize hidden food choices, and rationalize about whether risky choices that don't pay out are better than somewhat not preferable food pellets. Part of the result from that test was that dogs may just not care as much as wolves. That wolves with their diet and carnivore nature, have a much stronger preference toward what researchers believe is the preferable choice. Yet, from the wild dog perspective, they took a long time to have any testing preference for meat vs pellets, compared to the wolves immediate preference. [2]
Which is actually vaguely related to the topic article. You get a mediocre food pellet, but it solves the task, so you don't really care that much and move on. The "quality" of the food pellet in modern human existence has limited bearing.
[1] Frank & Frank 1985, "Comparative Manipulation Test Performance in Ten Week Old Wolves and Malamutes", https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Harry-Frank-2/publicati...
[2] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4993792/
anton-107|2 years ago
AlecSchueler|2 years ago
That's basically the whole idea behind dogs.
takinola|2 years ago
vel0city|2 years ago