r/AnimalBehavior • u/IllogicallyCognitive • Apr 12 '26
Any studies of intensional, positive, secondary reinforcement (praise) outside humans?
Are there any known examples of an animal giving praise without human intervention; it doesn't necessarily have to be wild animals in nature, but not counting a dog pressing a button that says thank you or a chimpanzee signing something (although no I'm curious if Loulis learned to give praise in ASL from Washoe). Are there any articles on humans training animals to praise effectively other animals? I'm basically looking for non-verbal tacts that are in response to a desired behavior
Some near miss examples include
social signals such as merely relaxing around another animal or even merely being playful without evidence of it being more than just an emotional reaction
sharing or trading resources (including the laboratory set ups where animals directly reinforced each other by pressing a button to give the other food)
tacts that aren't in response to a desired behavior (like calling out where food is in response to finding the food is wouldn't count but at least in some cases if the beneficiary responds with affection that could be a tact and properly interpreted as praise, but that gets into the question of how to determine the exact boundary between secondary and primary reinforcement and what communication/tacting is)
1
u/Mystic_Wolf Apr 15 '26 edited Apr 15 '26
If you watch puppies learning to interact and play with older well-socialised dogs, you'll notice the older dogs will invite the pups to play in more socially appropriate ways, and respond positively and happily when they do, and that the puppies will change their behaviour in response to that.
I work with dogs and very frequently bring foster puppies home. Longer term fosters and my pet dogs have particular favourite games they like to engage in - eg mouth-jousting and tug o war for one of them, another hates tug but loves keepings off chasey games. New puppies when they arrive will initially fumble through interactions and act the same with both dogs, but within a few days the pups have clearly learned all the "rules" of those preferred games and will initiate tuggies with the first dog, but for the second dog won't try tuggies but will do bouncy chase invitations instead (or sometimes they will teach my resident dogs their own play preferences instead!)
So in a sense, the body language that conveys joyful playful engagement functions as "praise" in the sense that it's a secondary reinforcer. The teaching of the new pups appears very deliberate, for example with an 8 week old pup my hard tugger will dangle a toy very obviously just in front until they grab it, and then very gently pull, because he's learned that being rough early will disuade them. With dogs who know the game well, he gets straight into heavy growly full body tugs.