# Smart Ungulates: What Sheep and Goats' Performances in a Reversed‐Reward Contingency Task Tell Us About the Evolution of Cognitive Flexibility

**Authors:** Laurie Castro, Raymond Nowak, Valérie Dufour

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72506 · 2026-01-14

## TL;DR

Young goats outperform sheep in a cognitive task, showing greater cognitive flexibility and inhibitory control, which suggests they are good models for studying the evolution of these abilities.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates cognitive flexibility in young goats and highlights ungulates as promising models for comparative cognition research.

## Key findings

- Goats performed better than sheep in the reversed-reward contingency task.
- Only younger goats solved the task, indicating cognitive flexibility is key.
- Sheep did not exceed chance-level performance in the task.

## Abstract

Cognitive flexibility and inhibitory control are core executive functions that enable animals to adapt their behaviour to variable environments. Although these abilities are extensively studied in primates, and despite a growing interest in ungulate cognition, research specifically targeting executive functions in ungulates remains limited. In this study, we compare the performance of domestic goats (
Capra hircus
) and sheep (
Ovis aries
) in a reversed‐reward contingency (RRC) task. This task is traditionally used to test inhibitory control (the ability to resist a prepotent response), but it should also involve cognitive flexibility (the ability to adapt to changed contingencies). Overall, goats performed better than sheep. Two young goats met the success criterion spontaneously, and two more succeeded following corrective procedures. No sheep exceeded chance‐level performance. Only younger goats solved the task, confirming that cognitive flexibility is indeed a core process in this task for ungulates. The differences between sheep and goats reflect subtle differences in their behavioural flexibility both in the social and ecological domains. These results extend comparative cognition research beyond primates, highlighting ungulates as promising models for studying the evolution of executive functions.

This study shows that young goats outperform sheep in the reversed‐reward contingency task, which is a cognitive test requiring both inhibitory control and cognitive flexibility. The results highlight the importance of cognitive flexibility when solving this type of task, and suggest that the differences between both species may reflect social and ecological behavioural flexibility. This highlights ungulates as promising models for studying the evolution of executive functions. Photo Credit: Maëlle Castro.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Capra hircus (taxon 9925), Ovis aries (taxon 9940)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Capra hircus (domestic goat, species) [taxon 9925], Ovis aries (domestic sheep, species) [taxon 9940]

## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12803774/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12803774