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Dive into the research topics where Angie M. Johnston is active.

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Featured researches published by Angie M. Johnston.


Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 2015

Another way to learn about teaching: What dogs can tell us about the evolution of pedagogy.

Angie M. Johnston; Katherine McAuliffe; Laurie R. Santos

Kline argues that it is crucial to isolate the respective roles of teaching and learning in order to understand how pedagogy has evolved. We argue that doing so requires testing species that learn from pedagogy but that rarely teach themselves. Here, we review how one previously neglected species - domesticated dogs (Canis familiaris) - may allow researchers to do just that.


Learning & Behavior | 2018

Dogs do not demonstrate a human-like bias to defer to communicative cues

Angie M. Johnston; Yiyun Huang; Laurie R. Santos

Human children and domesticated dogs learn from communicative cues, such as pointing, in highly similar ways. In two experiments, we investigate whether dogs are biased to defer to these cues in the same way as human children. We tested dogs on a cueing task similar to one previously conducted in human children. Dogs received conflicting information about the location of a treat from a Guesser and a Knower, who either used communicative cues (i.e., pointing; Experiments 1 and 2), non-communicative physical cues (i.e., a wooden marker; Experiment 1), or goal-directed actions (i.e., grasping; Experiment 2). Although human children tested previously struggled to override inaccurate information provided by the Guesser when she used communicative cues, in contrast to physical cues or goal-directed actions, dogs were more likely to override the Guesser’s information when she used communicative cues or goal-directed actions than when she used non-communicative physical cues. Given that dogs did not show the same selective bias towards the Guesser’s information in communicative contexts, these findings provide clear evidence that dogs do not demonstrate a human-like bias to defer to communicative cues. Instead, dogs may be more likely to critically evaluate information presented via communicative cues than either physical or non-communicative cues.


Cognition | 2015

How do children weigh competence and benevolence when deciding whom to trust

Angie M. Johnston; Candice M. Mills; Asheley R. Landrum


Developmental Science | 2017

Exploring the evolutionary origins of overimitation: a comparison across domesticated and non-domesticated canids

Angie M. Johnston; Paul C. Holden; Laurie R. Santos


Cognitive Science | 2014

Explanatory Scope Informs Causal Strength Inferences.

Samuel G. B. Johnson; Angie M. Johnston; Amy Toig; Frank C. Keil


Developmental Science | 2017

Little Bayesians or little Einsteins? Probability and explanatory virtue in children's inferences

Angie M. Johnston; Samuel G. B. Johnson; Marissa L. Koven; Frank C. Keil


Animal Behaviour | 2017

Uncovering the origins of dog–human eye contact: dingoes establish eye contact more than wolves, but less than dogs

Angie M. Johnston; Courtney Turrin; Lyn Watson; Alyssa M. Arre; Laurie R. Santos


Cognitive Science | 2015

Probabilistic Versus Heuristic Accounts of Explanation in Children: Evidence from a Latent Scope Bias.

Angie M. Johnston; Samuel G. B. Johnson; Marissa L. Koven; Frank C. Keil


Child Development | 2018

Preferences for Explanation Generality Develop Early in Biology But Not Physics

Angie M. Johnston; Mark Sheskin; Samuel G. B. Johnson; Frank C. Keil


Current opinion in psychology | 2018

What is unique about shared reality? Insights from a new comparison species

Angie M. Johnston; Molly Byrne; Laurie R. Santos

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Asheley R. Landrum

University of Texas at Dallas

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Candice M. Mills

University of Texas at Dallas

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