Greetings all!
My colleagues and I are happy to announce the publication of a new paper on 
"Conspecific "gaze following" in bottlenose dolphins", just out in Animal 
Cognition. Below is the abstract and link.

ABSTRACT
"Gaze following"—when one individual witnesses another shift its orientation, 
and then re-orients in the same direction—has been observed in a wide range of 
species. Related work with dolphins has to date focused on human–dolphin 
interactions. In this conspecific study, we examined a group of dolphins 
orienting, in passing, to gateways between their pools, as opportunities for 
witnesses to demonstrate "gaze following". Seven bottlenose dolphins were 
synchronously videotaped on six underwater cameras, for 21 h over three days, 
and the recordings analyzed by trained observers. The identities of all animals 
present, their partner state, and whether and to what degree they had altered 
their access to the gate (e.g., from Monocular to Binocular, or Binocular to 
Visio-Echoic) was recorded. Compared to animals that did not witness such a 
change, witnesses of an increase in access by another dolphin were 
significantly more likely to also act to increase their own access. We observed 
460 such cases of "gaze following" in these animals. Dolphins who were 
partnered (showed sustained swimming within 1 body length) were significantly 
more likely, than non-partnered animals, to "gaze follow". Dolphins also showed 
a significant tendency toward matching the kind of access they observed. No 
significant difference was found in the presence of animals in the back pools, 
during changes in orientation that were followed, versus in those that were 
not. These findings support adding bottlenose dolphins to the growing list of 
species that display conspecific "gaze following".

This paper is available online at:

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-022-01665-x<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-022-01665-x__;!!Mih3wA!CoB2wBJ5wxpmgLBiRAmcigA1PfsjQQY2zYHBXxyxa-7_y7IGE6ZVATW-ujO2iJTifNPXnM-3KgWtldd47Pim4ZUm5FUHe1g$>

or contact the lead author for a pdf.
All the best,
CMJ


Christine M. Johnson PhD

Director, Dolphin Cognition Lab

Dept. of Cognitive Science

University of California, San Diego
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