Most equine scientists would concur that social learning – where an individual learns a new behaviour by watching another individual perform it – does not occur in horses (or most other animals). Social learning is a sophisticated cognitive process; it requires the individual to see, attend to and understand the results of the demonstrator’s behaviour, gain insight about its relevance to their own motivations, transfer it to their own repertoire and finally to perform it.

Yet, how many of us have observed one clever pony seemingly showing another how to undo the latch from the barren sand paddock out to the laminitis-inducing spring pasture? Researchers suggest that what we are seeing in these apparent pony teaching seminars is social facilitation, where a behaviour (such as muzzle messing with the gate latch) is stimulated in another by the performance of that behaviour in one or more individuals. The emphasis is on stimulation of an existing behaviour (as when one horse rolling will precipitate a rolling frenzy from the entire group) rather than learning a new behaviour.

Maria Rørvang (2017), from Aarhus University, studied 22 young Icelandic horses, outfitted with a heart rate monitor, that had to freely cross a plastic tarp to access a bucket of food. Half of the horses watched a “demonstrator” perform the task first, while controls did not. All the horses learned to cross the tarp in the same amount of time, with or without the advantage of a demonstrator, suggesting that no social learning was occurring. However, the horses that had watched the demonstrator did so with significantly lower heart rates than controls; apparently, the calm demonstrator facilitated a similar calm behaviour in the observers.

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