Food, Affection and Gaze: Which Cues do Free-Ranging Dogs Consider for Engaging with Humans?
Srijaya Nandi, Dipayanti Aditya, Tithi Chakraborty, Rachael Sara Paul, Anindita Bhadra

TL;DR
This study investigates how free-ranging dogs prioritize different human cues like food, petting, and gaze, revealing their adaptive strategies for survival in human environments through behavioral experiments.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into the relative importance of various human cues for free-ranging dogs, highlighting their decision-making in resource acquisition and social engagement.
Findings
High-value food strongly drives approach and proximity behaviors.
Petting increases affiliative engagement but leads to quicker satiation.
Gaze alone maintains attention longer than mere human presence.
Abstract
Free-ranging dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) constitute the majority of the global dog population and rely heavily on human-derived resources. Studies show different levels of responses to various cues like food, petting and gazing by humans. However, the relative importance that dogs associate with these rewards, driving their interactions with unfamiliar humans remain understudied. Understanding how these dogs prioritize different rewards, ranging from food to social contact, can offer insights into their adaptive strategies within human-dominated ecosystems, and help to reduce conflict. We investigated the motivational value of different reward types in 150 adult free-ranging dogs in West Bengal, India. Using a between-subjects design, unfamiliar experimenters offered one of five rewards: high-value food (chicken), low-value food (biscuit), social interaction (petting), human gaze…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies · Rabies epidemiology and control · Primate Behavior and Ecology
