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Published in: Learning & Behavior 4/2018

02-07-2018

Revisiting the famous farm foxes: A psychological perspective

Author: Jonathan D. Lane

Published in: Learning & Behavior | Issue 4/2018

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Abstract

Five decades ago, Dmitry Belyaev, Lyudmila Trut, and colleagues began a now-famous experiment, selectively breeding foxes based on one criterion: perceived tame behavior. Over generations, the fox population changed in behavior (as predicted) but, intriguingly, also changed markedly in appearance—for example, many had wider mouths, curlier tails, different fur coloring, and floppy ears. These researchers concluded that the morphological changes that appeared in their foxes were a by-product of the researchers’ selecting for genetic variants that are implicated both in behavior and in appearance. For decades, scientists have largely accepted this “shared genetic variants” interpretation to fully account for the co-occurrence of behavioral and morphological phenotypes in these foxes and in other domesticated animals. However, several decades of psychological research on human social cognition, human–canine interaction, and canine behavior strongly suggest that such an account may be incomplete. I forward a supplementary perspective, based on psychological research, that the covariation of appearance and behavior among these foxes may be partly an artifact of human psychological processes at play in selection. These processes include humans’ tendency to infer individuals’ traits based on their physical features; trait inferences, in turn, influence how humans treat those individuals. If accurate, this account bears on our understanding of these famous foxes, human–canine interactions, as well as humans’ role in domestication.

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Footnotes
1
The occurrence of these morphological phenotypes differs in rate and in degree between species (Trut, 1999). And associations between morphology and temperament may differ between species—for example, horses and cats with mottled coats or light coats do not tend to possess “tamer” temperaments (e.g., Brunberg, Gille, Mikko, Lindgren, & Keeling, 2013; Stelow, Bain, & Kass, 2016).
 
2
For example, studies could be conducted with mammalian species that reach reproductive age more quickly than foxes.
 
Literature
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go back to reference Keeler, C. E. (1947). Coat color, physique, and temperament: Materials for the synthesis of hereditary behavior trends in the lower mammals and man. The Journal of Heredity, 38, 271–277.CrossRefPubMed Keeler, C. E. (1947). Coat color, physique, and temperament: Materials for the synthesis of hereditary behavior trends in the lower mammals and man. The Journal of Heredity, 38, 271–277.CrossRefPubMed
go back to reference Kubinyi, E., Sasvári-Székely, M., & Miklósi, Á. (2011). “Genetics and the social behavior of the dog” revisited: Searching for genes relating to personality in dogs. In M. Inoue-Murayama, S. Kawamura, & A. Weiss (Eds.), From genes to animal behavior (pp. 255–274). Tokyo: Springer Japan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-53892-9_12 CrossRef Kubinyi, E., Sasvári-Székely, M., & Miklósi, Á. (2011). “Genetics and the social behavior of the dog” revisited: Searching for genes relating to personality in dogs. In M. Inoue-Murayama, S. Kawamura, & A. Weiss (Eds.), From genes to animal behavior (pp. 255–274). Tokyo: Springer Japan. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​978-4-431-53892-9_​12 CrossRef
go back to reference Lane, J. D., Wellman, H. M., Olson, S. L., Miller, A. L., Wang, L., & Tardif, T. (2013). Relations between temperament and theory of mind development in the United States and China: Biological and behavioral correlates of preschoolers’ false-belief understanding. Developmental Psychology, 49, 825–836. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0028825 CrossRefPubMed Lane, J. D., Wellman, H. M., Olson, S. L., Miller, A. L., Wang, L., & Tardif, T. (2013). Relations between temperament and theory of mind development in the United States and China: Biological and behavioral correlates of preschoolers’ false-belief understanding. Developmental Psychology, 49, 825–836. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1037/​a0028825 CrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
Revisiting the famous farm foxes: A psychological perspective
Author
Jonathan D. Lane
Publication date
02-07-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Learning & Behavior / Issue 4/2018
Print ISSN: 1543-4494
Electronic ISSN: 1543-4508
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-018-0333-2

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