Jump to content

Clive Wynne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clive Wynne, 2023

Clive D. L. Wynne (born 1961) is a British-Australian ethologist specializing in the behavior of dogs and their wild relatives. He has worked in the United States, Australia, and Europe, and is currently based at Arizona State University in Tempe, AZ. He was born and raised on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England, studied at University College London, and got his Ph.D. at Edinburgh University. He has studied the behavior of many species - ranging from pigeons to dunnarts, but starting around 2006 melded his childhood love of dogs with his professional training and now studies and teaches about the behavior of dogs and their wild relatives.[1]

Education and career

[edit]

Wynne was educated at schools on the Isle of Wight including the now defunct Sandown High School, studied for his B.Sc. in Human Sciences at University College London, where he was influenced by the evolutionary psychologist Henry Plotkin. Wynne obtained his Ph.D. in Psychology for a dissertation on the behavior of barbary (turtle) doves at Edinburgh University in 1986. After time as a post-doc at the Ruhr-Universitat Bochum, Duke University, and the Universität Konstanz, where he was mentored by John Staddon and Juan Delius, Wynne's first faculty position was at the University of Western Australia. In 2002 Wynne moved to the University of Florida, and he came to Arizona State University in 2013 where he founded the Canine Science Collaboratory.[2]

Research interests

[edit]

Wynne's earlier research focused on the cognitive abilities of pigeons (e.g., Wynne et al. 1992;[3] Wynne 1997[4]), as well as their perception of arbitrary short time intervals (e.g., Wynne et al. 1996[5]). In Australia, Wynne studied the learning abilities of two species of marsupial, the fat-tailed dunnart (Sminthopsis crassicaudata) and the quokka (Setonix brachyurus) (e.g., Bonney and Wynne 2002a; 2002b[6][7]) and he is known for his opposition to anthropomorphism in the understanding of animal cognition (e.g., Wynne 2004[8]).

The specific focus of Wynne's ongoing research is the behaviour of dogs and their wild relatives. In this domain his group studies the ability of pet dogs to react adaptively to the behaviours of the people they live with; the deployment of applied behaviour analytic techniques to the treatment of problem behaviours in dogs; the behaviours of shelter dogs that influence their chances of adoption into human homes; improved methods for training sniffer dogs; the development of test banks for studying cognitive aging in pet dogs; and humans as social enrichment for captive canids.[9]

In 2017 Wynne and his collaborators organized the inaugural Canine Science Conference in Tempe, AZ - the first of its kind in North America.[9]

Books

[edit]
  • Animal Cognition: The Mental Lives of Animals (Palgrave)[10]
  • Do Animals Think? (Princeton University Press)[11]
  • Animal Cognition: Evolution, Behavior, and Cognition (Palgrave Macmillan))[12]
  • Dog Is Love: Why and How Your Dog Loves You (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wynne, Clive (2018). "How I went to the dogs". Psychologist. 31: 50–51.
  2. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (2018). "Clive Wynne". Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior and Cognition: 1–3.
  3. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L.; Fersen, L. von; Staddon, J. E. R. (1992). "Pigeons' inferences are transitive and are the outcome of elementary conditioning principles: A response". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes. 18 (3): 313–318. doi:10.1037/0097-7403.18.3.313.
  4. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (1997). "Pigeon transitive inference: Tests of simple accounts of a complex performance". Behavioural Processes. 39 (1): 95–112. doi:10.1016/S0376-6357(96)00048-4. PMID 24896713. S2CID 10808646.
  5. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L.; Staddon, J. E. R.; Delius, J. D. (1996). "Dynamics of waiting in pigeons". Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior. 65 (3): 603–618. doi:10.1901/jeab.1996.65-603. PMC 1349955. PMID 16812811.
  6. ^ Bonney, K. R.; Wynne, Clive D. L. (2002). "Quokkas (Setonix brachyurus) demonstrate tactile discrimination learning and serial-reversal learning". Journal of Comparative Psychology. 116 (1): 51–54. doi:10.1037/0735-7036.116.1.51. PMID 11930935.
  7. ^ Bonney, K. R.; Wynne, Clive D. L. (2002). "Visual discrimination learning and strategy behavior in the fat-tailed dunnarts ( Sminthopsis crassicaudata )". Journal of Comparative Psychology. 116 (1): 55–62. doi:10.1037/0735-7036.116.1.55. PMID 11930936.
  8. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (2004). "The perils of anthropomorphism". Nature. 428 (6983): 606. Bibcode:2004Natur.428..606W. doi:10.1038/428606a. PMID 15071579. S2CID 4409670.
  9. ^ a b "Canine Science Collaboratory".
  10. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (2001). Animal cognition : the mental lives of animals. Basingstoke, Hampshire, England: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0333923952. OCLC 48083994.
  11. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (2004). Do animals think?. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691113114. OCLC 52765941.
  12. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (30 August 2013). Animal cognition : evolution, behavior and cognition. Udell, Monique A. R. (Second ed.). Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave. ISBN 9780230294226. OCLC 861554734.
  13. ^ Wynne, Clive D. L. (2019). Dog is love : why and how your dog loves you. Boston. ISBN 9781328543967. OCLC 1080247122.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)