Natalia Putrino
University of Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Natalia Putrino.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Esteban Freidin; Natalia Putrino; María Ayelén D’orazio; Mariana Bentosela
Eavesdropping involves the acquisition of information from third-party interactions, and can serve to indirectly attribute reputation to individuals. There is evidence on eavesdropping in dogs, indicating that they can develop a preference for people based on their cooperativeness towards others. In this study, we tested dogs’ eavesdropping abilities one step further. In a first experiment, dogs could choose between cooperative demonstrators (the donors) who always gave food to an approaching third person (the beggar); here, the only difference between donors was whether they received positive or negative reactions from the beggar (through verbal and gestural means). Results showed that dogs preferentially approached the donor who had received positive reactions from the beggar. By contrast, two different conditions showed that neither the beggar’s body gestures nor the verbal component of the interaction on their own were sufficient to affect the dogs’ preferences. We also ran two further experiments to test for the possibility of dogs’ choices being driven by local enhancement. When the donors switched places before the choice, dogs chose at random. Similarly, in a nonsocial condition in which donors were replaced by platforms, subjects chose at chance levels. We conclude that dogs’ nonrandom choices in the present protocol relied on the simultaneous presence of multiple cues, such as the place where donors stood and several features of the beggar’s behavior (gestural and verbal reactions, and eating behavior). Nonetheless, we did not find conclusive evidence that dogs discriminated the donors by their physical features, which is a prerequisite of reputation attribution.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Fabricio Carballo; Esteban Freidin; Natalia Putrino; Carolina Shimabukuro; Emma Casanave; Mariana Bentosela
Discrimination of and memory for others’ generous and selfish behaviors could be adaptive abilities in social animals. Dogs have seemingly expressed such skills in both direct and indirect interactions with humans. However, recent studies suggest that their capacity may rely on cues other than people’s individual characteristics, such as the place where the person stands. Thus, the conditions under which dogs recognize individual humans when solving cooperative tasks still remains unclear. With the aim of contributing to this problem, we made dogs interact with two human experimenters, one generous (pointed towards the food, gave ostensive cues, and allowed the dog to eat it) and the other selfish (pointed towards the food, but ate it before the dog could have it). Then subjects could choose between them (studies 1-3). In study 1, dogs took several training trials to learn the discrimination between the generous and the selfish experimenters when both were of the same gender. In study 2, the discrimination was learned faster when the experimenters were of different gender as evidenced both by dogs’ latencies to approach the bowl in training trials as well as by their choices in preference tests. Nevertheless, dogs did not get confused by gender when the experimenters were changed in between the training and the choice phase in study 3. We conclude that dogs spontaneously used human gender as a cue to discriminate between more and less cooperative experimenters. They also relied on some other personal feature which let them avoid being confused by gender when demonstrators were changed. We discuss these results in terms of dogs’ ability to recognize individuals and the potential advantage of this skill for their lives in human environments.
Journal of Environmental Psychology | 2014
Adriana Jakovcevic; Linda Steg; Nadia Mazzeo; Romina Caballero; Paul Franco; Natalia Putrino; Jesica Favara
Behavioural Processes | 2015
Carolina Shimabukuro; Natalia Putrino; Julia Helbling; Sandra Tognetti; Mariana Bentosela
Terapia psicológica | 2017
Guido Guzmán; Natalia Putrino; Felipe Martínez; Nicolás Quiroz
Revista de Psicología | 2014
Natalia Putrino; Adriana Jakovcevic; Silvana Carpintero; María Ayelén D’orazio; Mariana Bentosela
Archive | 2014
Natalia Putrino; Adriana Jakovcevic; Silvana Carpintero; Mariana Bentosela
V Congreso Internacional de Investigación y Práctica Profesional en Psicología XX Jornadas de Investigación Noveno Encuentro de Investigadores en Psicología del MERCOSUR | 2013
Carolina Shimabukuro; Natalia Putrino; María Ayelén D’orazio; Julia Helbling; Sandra Tognetti; Mariana Bentosela
Revista Argentina de Ciencias del Comportamiento | 2013
Julián Ferreiro; Natalia Putrino; Romina Caballero; Paul Franco; Johann Streiker-Díaz; Nadia Mazzeo; Adriana Jakovcevic
IV Congreso Internacional de Investigación y Práctica Profesional en Psicología XIX Jornadas de Investigación VIII Encuentro de Investigadores en Psicología del MERCOSUR | 2012
Natalia Putrino; María Ayelén D’orazio; Mariana Bentosela