Data for research article: "Domestic horses (Equus caballus) prefer to approach humans displaying a submissive body posture rather than a dominant body posture" Amy Smith Clara Wilson Karen Mccomb Leanne Proops 10.25377/sussex.5536444.v1 https://sussex.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_for_research_article_Domestic_horses_Equus_caballus_prefer_to_approach_humans_displaying_a_submissive_body_posture_rather_than_a_dominant_body_posture_/5536444 <div><div><div>Raw data for article appearing in the journal Animal Cognition. Tables show subjects' responses to human postures (sheet one for choice data, sheet two for latency data).</div><div><br></div><div><b>Abstract from article</b></div><div>Signals of dominance and submissiveness are central to conspecific communication in many species. For domestic animals, sensitivities to these signals in humans may also be beneficial. We presented domestic horses with a free choice between two unfamiliar humans, one adopting a submissive and the other a dominant body posture, with vocal and facial cues absent. Horses had previously been given food rewards by both human demonstrators, adopting neutral postures, to encourage approach behaviour. Across four counterbalanced test trials, horses showed a significant preference for approaching the submissive posture in both the first trial and across subsequent trials, and no individual subject showed an overall preference for dominant postures. There was no significant difference in latency to approach the two postures. This study provides novel evidence that domestic horses may spontaneously discriminate between, and attribute communicative significance to, human body postures of dominance; and further, that familiarity with the signaller is not a requirement for this response. These findings raise interesting questions about the plasticity of social signal perception across the species barrier.</div></div></div> 2017-11-20 12:35:00 body posture interspecific communication Animal Behaviour Animal behaviour