90 research outputs found

    La thérapie assistée par les dauphins : une pratique alternative de soutien à l’interaction

    Get PDF
    L’article propose une analyse critique des techniques psychocorporelles visant à améliorer les troubles psychomoteurs, cognitifs ou de la communication par le contact avec des dauphins. Le désir d’interaction, soutenu par une forte implication de l’équipe thérapeutique, et éventuellement par des effets biologiques liés aux ondes sonores ou ultrasonores, pourraient expliquer le potentiel d’améliorations constatées chez des enfants autistes, qui devront être confirmées par des études complémentaires. Les mécanismes d’interaction non-verbale entre hommes et dauphins constituent un instrument de compréhension de la communication non-verbale, applicable à la communication dans les organisations.The article proposes a critical analysis of psycho-corporeal techniques used for the improvement of communication, cognitive. or movement problems through the interaction with dolphins. A strong desire for interaction, an important implication of the therapy team, a possible effects linked to sound or ultrasound waves may explain the improvement capacities that can be observed with autistic children. Further complementary studies should confirm these capacities. Non-verbal interaction mechanisms between man and dolphin constitute interesting means of understanding human non-verbal communication, and it’s functioning within organizations

    Are Dogs Able to Communicate with Their Owners about a Desirable Food in a Referential and Intentional Way?

    Get PDF
    The ability of dogs to use human communicative signals has been exhaustively studied. However, few studies have focused on the production of communicative signals by dogs. the current study investigated if dogs are able to communicate by using directional signals towards some desirable object in the environment and also if they show an apparent intention to manipulate their owner's behavior in order to receive it. Some operational criteria were used to investigate referential and intentional communication: the signal should be influenced by the audience and by the recipient's direction of visual attention; the sender should display gaze alternations between the recipient and the object and attention-getting behaviors, and, finally, the sender should persist and elaborate the communication when attempts to manipulate the recipient failed. Aiming to investigate these criteria in dogs, 29 subjects were tested using an experimental set up in which they could see a desirable but unreachable food and they needed the cooperation of their owners in order to receive it. This study found evidence of all operational criteria, especially for gaze alternation between the owner and the food, which suggested that some dogs' communicative behaviors could be functionally referential and intentional. Nevertheless, similar to other studies about social cognition in animals, it is not possible to distinguish if the dog's behaviors are based on simple mechanisms or on a theory of mind about their owners.Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Publ Polit & Publ Hlth, Santos, SP, BrazilUniv São Paulo, Dept Expt Psychol, São Paulo, BrazilAix Marseille Univ, CNRS, Lab Psychol Cognit, UMR7290, Marseille, FranceUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Publ Polit & Publ Hlth, Santos, SP, BrazilWeb of Scienc

    Olive baboons, Papio anubis, adjust their visual and auditory intentional gestures to the visual attention of others

    No full text
    International audienceAlthough nonhuman primates' gestural communication is often considered to be a likely precursor of human language, the intentional properties in this communicative system have not yet been entirely elucidated. In particular, little is known about the intentional nature of monkeys' gestural signalling and related social understanding. We investigated whether olive baboons can (1) adjust their requesting gestures to the visual attention of the experimenter with special emphasis on the state of the eyes (open versus closed), and (2) flexibly tailor visual and auditory-based gestures to elaborate their communication as a function of whether or not the experimenter can see them. Using a food-requesting paradigm, we found monkeys able to favour either visual or auditory-based requesting gestures to match the experimenter's visual attention. Crucially, when the human was not visually attending, they silenced visual gestures to some extent but performed more attention-getting gestures. This is, to our knowledge, the first report of monkeys elaborating attention-getting signals to compensate for communication breakdown. Gestural communication was also supported by gaze alternation between the experimenter's face and the food, especially when the human was visually attending. These findings offer evidence that olive baboons understand the state of the eyes in others' visual attention and use requesting gestures intentionally. They emphasize that Old World monkeys shift to acoustic communication when the recipient is not visually attending. In contrast to that of human infants and great apes, this acoustic communication is purely gestural, not vocal

    Does visual experience influence arm proprioception and its lateralization? Evidence from passive matching performance in congenitally-blind and sighted adults

    Full text link
    In humans, body segments' position and movement can be estimated from multiple senses such as vision and proprioception. It has been suggested that vision and proprioception can influence each other and that upper-limb proprioception is asymmetrical, with proprioception of the non-dominant arm being more accurate and/or precise than proprioception of the dominant arm. However, the mechanisms underlying the lateralization of proprioceptive perception are not yet understood. Here we tested the hypothesis that early visual experience influences the lateralization of arm proprioceptive perception by comparing 8 congenitally-blind and 8 matched, sighted right-handed adults. Their proprioceptive perception was assessed at the elbow and wrist joints of both arms using an ipsilateral passive matching task. Results support and extend the view that proprioceptive precision is better at the non-dominant arm for blindfolded sighted individuals. While this finding was rather systematic across sighted individuals, proprioceptive precision of congenitally-blind individuals was not lateralized as systematically, suggesting that lack of visual experience during ontogenesis influences the lateralization of arm proprioception

    Exorcising Grice’s ghost : an empirical approach to studying intentional communication in animals

    Get PDF
    Language’s intentional nature has been highlighted as a crucial feature distinguishing it from other communication systems. Specifically, language is often thought to depend on highly structured intentional action and mutual mindreading by a communicator and recipient. Whilst similar abilities in animals can shed light on the evolution of intentionality, they remain challenging to detect unambiguously. We revisit animal intentional communication and suggest that progress in identifying analogous capacities has been complicated by (i) the assumption that intentional (that is, voluntary) production of communicative acts requires mental-state attribution, and (ii) variation in approaches investigating communication across sensory modalities. To move forward, we argue that a framework fusing research across modalities and species is required. We structure intentional communication into a series of requirements, each of which can be operationalised, investigated empirically, and must be met for purposive, intentionally communicative acts to be demonstrated. Our unified approach helps elucidate the distribution of animal intentional communication and subsequently serves to clarify what is meant by attributions of intentional communication in animals and humans

    Interactive modalities by guide-dogs towards their master

    No full text
    International audienc

    Les cognitions du chien.

    No full text
    International audienc

    Behavioral synchronization and affiliation: Dogs exhibit human-like skills

    No full text
    International audienceBehavioral synchronization is evolutionary adaptive, fostering social cohesion. In humans, affiliation between partners is associated with a high level of behavioral synchronization; people show increased affiliation towards people who synchronize with them. Surprisingly, until recently, little was known about these phenomena at an interspecific level, which is, however, essential to better understand the respective roles of evolution and ontogeny. After presenting why dog-human dyads are a relevant biological model to study this field of social cognition, we review the recent findings about dog-human behavioral synchronization. We summarize recently published findings on behavioral synchronization and affiliation between dogs and humans. We also review results showing that genetic selection modulates behavioral synchronization propensity in dogs, emphasizing the role of genetic selection on dog's social behaviors towards humans. Finally, we discuss the possible evolutionary influences and proximate mechanisms of this phenomenon. We conclude that, as in humans, behavioral synchronization acts as a social glue between dogs and humans. After dogs' ability to use human-directional cues or to produce referential cues towards humans, we evidenced a new human-like social process in the dog, at the interspecfic level with humans

    Les activités assistées par les dauphins : Une pratique alternative de soutien à l'interaction

    No full text
    National audienc
    • …
    corecore