Horses can use symbols to talk to us

Authored by sciencemag.org and submitted by QuietCakeBionics
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There will never be a horse like Mr. Ed, the talking equine TV star. But scientists have discovered that the animals can learn to use another human tool for communicating: pointing to symbols. They join a short list of other species, including some primates, dolphins, and pigeons, with this talent. Scientists taught 23 riding horses of various breeds to look at a display board with three icons, representing wearing or not wearing a blanket. Horses could choose between a “no change” symbol or symbols for “blanket on” or “blanket off.” Previously, their owners made this decision for them. Horses are adept at learning and following signals people give them, and it took these equines an average of 10 days to learn to approach and touch the board and to understand the meaning of the symbols. All 23 horses learned the entire task within 14 days. They were then tested in various weather conditions to see whether they could use the board to tell their trainers about their blanket preferences. The scientists report online in Applied Animal Behaviour Science that the horses did not touch the symbols randomly, but made their choices based on the weather. If it was wet, cold, and windy, they touched the "blanket on" icon; horses that were already wearing a blanket nosed the “no change” image. But when the weather was sunny, the animals touched the "blanket off" symbol; those that weren’t blanketed pressed the “no change” icon. The study’s strong results show that the horses understood the consequences of their choices, say the scientists, who hope that other researchers will use their method to ask horses more questions.

diogyn on January 30th, 2018 at 00:06 UTC »

Our horse just rips his blanket off when he doesn't want it anymore. Then he stomps it into the mud for good measure.

bobdolebannanas on January 29th, 2018 at 22:01 UTC »

I wonder if any of the horses had QA tester blood and tried to break the system by requesting more blankets be put on them or taking the blanket off when they didn't have one.

matman88 on January 29th, 2018 at 20:05 UTC »

My dog can ask for food by giving me a paw (unsolicited). He can ring a bell on the door to ask to go out. He can bark to let me know he wants to come in. My dog isn't even particularly brilliant. I'm not the least bit surprised that horses are capable of communicating that they are cold.