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Horses are smart enough to plan and strategise, new study shows

You can lead a horse to water and, it turns out, convince it to drink if the reward is great enough, researchers have found.

A new study has suggested horses are more intelligent than previously thought, having been observed to quickly adapt to a treat-based game with changing rules.

Researchers from Nottingham Trent University (NTU) said they were surprised by how the horses quickly grasped the game, busting previous theories that equine brains respond only to immediate stimuli and are not complex enough to strategise.

“This teaches us that we shouldn’t make assumptions about animal intelligence or sentience based on whether they are ‘built’ just like us,” she said.

LovableBastard ,

previous theories that equine brains respond only to immediate stimuli and are not complex enough to strategise

Who held those theories? And have they ever been around horses?

Just this weekend my spouse and I had to move our mare and almost 4 month old colt. She’s quite used to riding in a small horse trailer, but the little guy was terrified of getting into it. When his mom realized it, she started getting on and off the trailer several times to show him it was fine. Then she went behind him and kept nudging him towards the trailer. Seemed pretty obvious to me that she knew what was going on and was trying her best to help the little guy understand it was all ok.

I’ve certainly met some horses that could have made me question the species’ intelligence if they were the only ones I knew. But there are plenty of intelligent horses out there. I’m really surprised that the prevailing theory was that they only respond to immediate stimuli.

Apytele ,

Honestly I would’ve guessed that on size alone. Its generally a characteristic of anything bigger than a fruit fly, and especially mammals and birds.

Lauchs ,

Great, so now in addition to being big enough to kick me to death they can now plan how they’re gonna get away with it.

MagicShel ,

“Now explain the getaway plan, Carl.”

“I’m thinking… We have 4 feet and can travel at the speed of a galloping horse.”

“Oats, Carl. Where are we going to find oats?”

“I’ve stashed a bunch away in the corner of the barn.”

munch munch hard swallow The uh… corner you say?”

“God dammit, Applebottom! Farmer Bill lives, for now…”

MudMan ,

I am constantly surprised by how often you get reports of "animal such and such is capable of basic task".

I would assume it's a case of misreporting technical information, but then you hear how entrenched some professionals on the field are when it comes to assuming some type of exceptional, unique magical property in human brains and how "antropomorphizing" is used as a dirty word and it makes you wonder. I once had a biologist get very angry at me for suggesting dogs are capable of play behavior, so all bets are off, I guess?

girlfreddy OP ,
@girlfreddy@lemmy.ca avatar

That biologist has never seen juvenile animals of any sort then … because they all play in their own manner.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

If I remember correctly, play in both juvenile animals and humans is primarily about practicing for adulthood in all sorts of ways. Making it enjoyable is obviously of an evolutionary benefit. Like you said- puppies clearly enjoy playing, as do adult dogs since they have been bred to retain juvenile wolf features, and wolf pups also enjoy playing, but stop when they become adults.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve never trusted horses. Now I know why. They’re plotting.

SirSamuel ,

As one of nature’s pedestrians, I’ll never trust a creature that looks at me with it’s teeth. Even I could tell you those bastards are plotting something all of the time

MediaBiasFactChecker Bot ,

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