Indira Bulhan’s research while affiliated with Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Kolkata and other places

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Publications (2)


Correction: Ready, set, yellow! color preference of Indian free-ranging dogs
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February 2025

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Animal Cognition

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An FRD approaching the three-choice setup in Experiment 1 that has blue, yellow, and gray (left to right) bowls
The bars denote observed frequency of choice in Experiment 1, converted to percentage. The whiskers show Wilson’s 95% CI around the observations. Different letters atop bars denote significant difference at α = 0.05
The setup for Experiment 3: control for the smell of paint. Blue and yellow colored bowls are present, but not visible, under the pink and white sieves. The porous portion (white) of the sieves allow smell of the paint to pass through
Results of the strength of preference experiments (3.4). The columns denote observed frequency of choice, converted to percentage. The whiskers show Wilson’s 95% CI around the observations. Different letters atop bars (a or b) denote significant difference between choices under each experiment condition (goodness of fit χ²) and the different numbers atop the graphs (1 or 2) denote significant difference between experiment conditions (contingency χ²)
Ready, set, yellow! color preference of Indian free-ranging dogs

February 2025

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62 Reads

Animal Cognition

Most of the research on color vision related behaviors in dogs has involved training the dogs to perform visual discrimination tasks. We investigated the importance of color to untrained Indian free-ranging dogs (FRDs). Using one-time multi-option choice tests for color preference in 134 adult dogs, we found the dogs to prefer yellow objects over blue or gray ones while there was no preference between blue and gray. We next pitted a yellow object against a gray object that had food. Here, the dogs ignored the food (biscuit or chicken) to approach the yellow object first indicating the color preference to be quite strong. Color preference has previously been investigated in many other animals and has implications for behaviors like mate choice and foraging. Our study provides a new perspective into the ecology of Indian FRDs and might have implications for companion dogs as well, if they too show this preference.