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Featured researches published by B.L. Deputte.


Animal Cognition | 2011

Cattle discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics by using only head visual cues

Marjorie Coulon; Claude Baudoin; Y. Heyman; B.L. Deputte

Faces have features characteristic of the identity, age and sex of an individual. In the context of social communication and social recognition in various animal species, facial information is relevant for discriminating between familiar and unfamiliar individuals. Here, we present two experiments aimed at testing the ability of cattle (Bos taurus) to visually discriminate between heads (including face views) of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics represented as 2D images. In the first experiment, we observed the spontaneous behaviour of heifers when images of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics were simultaneously presented. Our results show that heifers were more attracted towards the image of a familiar conspecific (i.e., it was chosen first, explored more, and given more attention) than towards the image of an unfamiliar one. In the second experiment, the ability to discriminate between images of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics was tested using a food-rewarded instrumental conditioning procedure. Eight out of the nine heifers succeeded in discriminating between images of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics and in generalizing on the first trial to a new pair of images of familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics, suggesting a categorization process of familiar versus unfamiliar conspecifics in cattle. Results of the first experiment and the observation of ear postures during the learning process, which was used as an index of the emotional state, provided information on picture processing in cattle and lead us to conclude that images of conspecifics were treated as representations of real individuals.


Theriogenology | 2010

Social behavior and kin discrimination in a mixed group of cloned and non cloned heifers (Bos taurus)

Marjorie Coulon; Claude Baudoin; Hervé Abdi; Y. Heyman; B.L. Deputte

For more than ten years, reproductive biotechnologies using somatic cell nuclear transfer have made possible the production of cloned animals in various domestic and laboratory species. The influence of the cloning process on offspring characteristics has been studied in various developmental aspects, however, it has not yet been documented in detail for behavioral traits. Behavioral studies of cloned animals have failed to show clear inter-individual differences associated with the cloning process. Preliminary results showed that clones favor each others company. Preferential social interactions were observed among cloned heifers from the same donor in a mixed herd that also included cloned heifers and control heifers produced by artificial insemination (AI). These results suggest behavioral differences between cloned and non-cloned animals and similarities between clones from the same donor. The aim of the present study was to replicate and to extend these previous results and to study behavioral and cognitive mechanisms of this preferential grouping. We studied a group composed of five cloned heifers derived from the same donor cow, two cloned heifers derived from another donor cow, and AI heifers. Cloned heifers from the same donor were more spatially associated and interacted more between themselves than with heifers derived from another donor or with the AI individuals. This pattern indicates a possible kin discrimination in clones. To study this process, we performed an experiment (using an instrumental conditioning procedure with food reward) of visual discrimination between images of heads of familiar heifers, either related to the subjects or not. The results showed that all subjects (AI and cloned heifers) discriminated between images of familiar cloned heifers produced from the same donor and images of familiar unrelated heifers. Cattle discriminated well between images and used morphological similarities characteristic of cloned related heifers. Our results suggest similar cognitive capacities of kin and non kin discrimination in AI and cloned animals. Kinship may be a common factor in determining the social grouping within a herd.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Individual Recognition in Domestic Cattle (Bos taurus): Evidence from 2D-Images of Heads from Different Breeds

Marjorie Coulon; B.L. Deputte; Y. Heyman; Claude Baudoin


Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2011

Do dogs understand human facial expressions

B.L. Deputte; A. Doll


Theriogenology | 2007

Dairy cattle exploratory and social behaviors: is there an effect of cloning?

Marjorie Coulon; Claude Baudoin; M. Depaulis-Carre; Y. Heyman; Jean-Paul Renard; Christophe Richard; B.L. Deputte


Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2012

Could interactions beetween puppies, Canis familiaris, and a dog-robot (aibo, sony©) during a short meeting predict further interactions between these dogs and conspecifics?

M. Leprovost; F. May; B.L. Deputte


Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2012

Influence of a 3d design on the behavior of kenneled dogs: A preliminary study

C. Renard; Karine Reynaud; F. Péron; S. Belkhir; B.L. Deputte


Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2012

Visual discrimination of species in the dog, canis familiaris

Dominique Autier Dérian; Karine Chalvet-Monfray; Luc Mounier; Cindy Ribolzi; B.L. Deputte


Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2009

Whom do 8-week-old puppies (Canis familiaris) prefer, their mother or their littermates?

Florence May; B.L. Deputte; Jean-Luc Durand


Dairy cattle exploratory and social behaviour: a comparaison of cloned and control heifers. | 2006

Dairy cattle exploratory and social behaviour: a comparaison of cloned and control heifers.

Coulon Marjorie; Claude Baudoin; B.L. Deputte; Y. Heyman; C. Richard

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Y. Heyman

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Christophe Richard

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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F. May

University of Paris

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