@article{73f8604613234a2893a600d2d48f4564,
title = "Are you better than me? Social comparisons in carrion crows (Corvus corone)",
abstract = "Comparing oneself to others is a key process in humans that allows individuals to gauge their performances and abilities and thus develop and calibrate their self-image. Little is known about its evolutionary foundations. A key feature of social comparison is the sensitivity to other individuals{\textquoteright} performance. Recent studies on primates produced equivocal results, leading us to distinguish between a {\textquoteleft}strong{\textquoteright} variant of the social comparison hypothesis formulated for humans and a {\textquoteleft}weak{\textquoteright} variant found in non-human primates that would comprise some elements of human social comparison. Here, we focus on corvids that are distantly related to primates and renowned for their socio-cognitive skills. We were interested in whether crows{\textquoteright} task performances were influenced (i) by the presence of a conspecific co-actor performing the same discrimination task and (ii) by the simulated acoustic cues of a putative co-actor performing better or worse than themselves. Crows reached a learning criterion quicker when tested simultaneously as compared to when tested alone, indicating a facilitating effect of social context. The performance of a putative co-actor influenced their performance: crows were better at discriminating familiar images when their co-actor was better than they were. Standard extremity (how pronounced the difference was between the performance of the subject and that of the co-actor), and category membership (affiliation status and sex), of the putative co-actors had no effect on their performance. Our findings are in line with the {\textquoteleft}weak{\textquoteright} variant of social comparison and indicate that elements of human social comparison can be found outside of primates.",
keywords = "Corvus corone, Crow, Discrimination, Inequity aversion, Social comparison, Social facilitation",
author = "Federspiel, {I. G.} and V. Schmitt and R. Schuster and C. Rockenbach and A. Braun and Loretto, {M. C.} and C. Michels and J. Fischer and T. Mussweiler and T. Bugnyar",
note = "Funding Information: This study was financially supported by DFG (Forschergruppe FOR 2150 “Relativity in Social Cognition“ (Fi707/18-1)), Leibniz Price to T. Mussweiler (Mu 1500/5-1) and the FWF (Austrian Science Fund, START prize Y366-B17) to T. Bugnyar; the {\textquoteleft}Verein der F{\"o}rder KLF{\textquoteright} provided permanent support and the Cumberland Wildpark Gr{\"u}nau provided logistical support. We are grateful to the teams at the Social Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, the Cognitive Ethology Lab at the DPZ G{\"o}ttingen and the Cognitive Biology Department, University of Vienna, for fruitful discussions. Furthermore, we thank the team at the Konrad Lorenz Forschungsstelle, Gr{\"u}nau, for their help with animal caretaking and Nadja Kavcik for assembling Fig. b and Ivo Federspiel for assembling Fig. . Funding Information: This study was financially supported by DFG (Forschergruppe FOR 2150 “Relativity in Social Cognition“ (Fi707/18-1)), Leibniz Price to T. Mussweiler (Mu 1500/5-1) and the FWF (Austrian Science Fund, START prize Y366-B17) to T. Bugnyar; the {\textquoteleft}Verein der F{\"o}rder KLF{\textquoteright} provided permanent support and the Cumberland Wildpark Gr{\"u}nau provided logistical support. We are grateful to the teams at the Social Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, the Cognitive Ethology Lab at the DPZ G{\"o}ttingen and the Cognitive Biology Department, University of Vienna, for fruitful discussions. Furthermore, we thank the team at the Konrad Lorenz Forschungsstelle, Gr{\"u}nau, for their help with animal caretaking and Nadja Kavcik for assembling Fig. 1 b and Ivo Federspiel for assembling Fig. 2. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1007/s10071-023-01785-y",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "1353--1368",
journal = "Animal Cognition",
issn = "1435-9448",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag Berlin-Heidelberg",
number = "4",
}