About this Research Topic
The scientific studies of the cognitive abilities of some domestic species, notably dogs, has greatly expanded over the past decade, due in part to the high cost of laboratory work with species that have previously been subject to experimental research. These include pigeons, rats, and nonhuman primates, and all are now extremely expensive to maintain in captivity, because of housing and maintenance costs. Dogs, as companion animals, however, are readily available from volunteer owners who are often eager to have the perceived high intelligence of their own dog demonstrated under the more rigorous testing conditions of an experimental laboratory. Similarly, investigators of animal cognition are also turning to other captive domesticated species, to explore facts of cognitive mechanisms that may be shared across species or are perhaps unique in the evolutionary and domestication pathway for that specific animal species. These include horses, goats, sheep, cats, pigs, and birds, among others. Thus, the costs of obtaining and housing test subjects need not be an obstacle to exploring many of the intriguing questions that the field of comparative cognition (the study of cognition across a wide range of species) remain keen to explore.
Consequently, the potential for studies of cognition in domestic animals is ripe for the cross-fertilization that continues to emerge among and between the fields of comparative psychology, ethology, developmental psychology, animal science, veterinary medicine, zoo biology, cognition, and behavioral neuroscience. Therefore, the aim of this Research Topic is to bring the latest findings cognitive processing by domesticated animals from a variety of species, approaches, and laboratories from international investigators.
Keywords: Animal cognition, behavior, comparative cognition, domestic animals, animal intelligence
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.