Horses not only remember people who have treated them well, they also understand words better than expected, research shows.
THE GIST:
- Horses remain loyal to humans with which they have had past, positive encounters.
- The animals remember people even after long separation.
- Horses understand vocal commands better than expected.
By
Jennifer
Viegas
Wed Mar 17, 2010 04:58 AM ET
Wed Mar 17, 2010 04:58 AM ET
Horses also understand words better than expected, according to the research, and possess "excellent memories," allowing horses to not only recall their human friends after periods of separation, but also to remember complex, problem-solving strategies for ten years or more.
The bond with humans likely is an extension of horse behavior in the wild, since horses value their own horse relatives and friends, and are also open to new, non-threatening acquaintances.
"Horses maintain long-term bonds with several members of their family group, but they also interact temporarily with members of other groups when forming herds," explained Carol Sankey, who led the research, and her team.
"Equid social relationships are long-lasting and, in some cases, lifelong," added the scientists, whose paper has been accepted for publication in the journal Animal Behavior.
Ethologist Sankey of the University of Rennes and her colleagues studied 20 Anglo-Arabian and three French Saddlebred horses stabled in Chamberet, France. The scientists tested how well the horses remembered a female trainer and her instructions after she and the horses had been separated up to eight months.
The training program for the horses
consisted of 41 steps associated with basic grooming and medical care. For
example, the horses had to remain immobile in response to the verbal command
"reste!" which is French for "stay." The horses also
had to lift their feet, tolerate a thermometer inserted into the rectum and
more. When a horse did as it was instructed, the trainer rewarded it with food
pellets.
With tasty rewards, the horses
"displayed more 'positive' behaviors toward the experimenter, such as
sniffing and licking," the researchers wrote. Horses do this as a sign of
affiliation with each other, so they weren't necessarily just seeking more
food.
The scientists added, "Horses
trained without reinforcement expressed four to six times more 'negative'
behaviors, such as biting, kicking and 'falling down' on the
experimenter."
Nevertheless, after the eight months of
separation, the horses trained with food rewards gravitated towards the same
experimenter. The horses also seemed to accept new people more readily,
indicating they had developed a "positive memory of humans" in
general.
"From our results, it appears that
horses are no different than humans (in terms of positive reinforcement
teachings)," according to the researchers. "They behave, learn and
memorize better when learning is associated with a positive situation."
While people often train dogs in this
way, also using verbal commands, Sankey and her team point out that "the
majority of horse-riding training is based on tactile sensations -- pressure
from bits, movements of riders' legs, weight change in the saddle."
Since "horses are able to learn and
memorize human words" and can hear the human voice better than even dogs
can, due to their particular range of hearing, the scientists predict trainers
could have success if they incorporate more vocal commands into their horse
training programs.
Jill Starr is president and founder of Lifesavers Wild Horse Rescue, a
non-profit that provides refuge, training and adoption placement for otherwise
slaughter-bound wild mustangs and domestic horses.
Starr told Discovery News that she's
observed horses responding well to verbal commands, such as "trot,"
but she still feels "horses and people get along better if the person
doesn't chatter, since this causes the individual to have greater awareness of
body language that is more familiar to horses."
She, however, agrees that horses are
loyal, intelligent and have very long-lasting memories -- of both good and bad
experiences.
Starr said, "Horses can be very
forgiving, but they never forget."
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