Abstract
Many "higher" animals are commonly assumed to distinguish between individual humans. This belief is based largely on anecdotal reports; in reality, there is little empirical evidence to support human recognition in nonhuman species. We report that laboratory rats consistently chose a familiar human over an unfamiliar human following fourteen and five 10-min exposures and even following a single 10-min exposure. Furthermore, this preference was retained in the absence of additional contact for at least 5 months. These results confirm that laboratory rats can tell individual humans apart, a prerequisite for associating them with hedonic events. Such human-based conditioning, described by Pavlov and by Gantt, Newton, Royer, and Stephens (1966), may have important implications for animal research in a variety of settings.
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CITATION STYLE
Davis, H., Taylor, A. A., & Norris, C. (1997). Preference for familiar humans by rats. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 4(1), 118–120. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03210783
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