It's likely no surprise to
dog owners, but growing research suggests that man's best friend often acts
more human than canine. Dogs can read facial expressions,
communicate jealousy, display empathy, and even watch TV, studies have shown. They've picked up these
people-like traits during their evolution from wolves to domesticated pets, which occurred
between 11,000 and 16,000 years ago, experts say.
In particular, "paying
attention to us, getting along with us, [and] tolerating us" has led to
particular characteristics that often mirror ours, says Laurie Santos,
director of the Yale Comparative Cognition Laboratory. Here are a few of the
latest studies showing the human side of our canine companions.
Eavesdropping Dogs
Social eavesdropping—or people-watching—is central to human social
interactions, since it allows us to figure out who's nice and who's mean.
In a new study, scientists tested 54 dogs that each watched their owners
struggle to retrieve a roll of tape from a container. The dogs were divided
into three groups: helper, non-helper, and control.
In the helper group, the owner requested help from another person, who
held the container. In the non-helper group, the owner asked for help from a
person, who then turned their back without helping. In the control group, the
additional person turned his or her back without being asked for help. In all
experiments, a third, "neutral" person sat in the room.
After the first round of experiments, the neutral person and the helper
or non-helper both offered treats to the dog.
In the non-helper group, canines most frequently favored the neutral
person's treat, shunning the non-helper. However, in the helper group, the dogs
did not favor either the helper or the neutral person over the other.
Scientists have previously observed similar results in human infants and tufted
capuchin monkeys.
So are dogs taking sides by ignoring the people who are mean to their
owners? Only future research will tell.
Made You Look
Gaze following is instinctual for
many animals—including humans, chimps, goats, dolphins, and even the red-footed
tortoise—because it alerts animals to everything from immediate threats to
"a particularly tasty berry bush," says Lisa Wallis, a
doctoral student at the Messerli Research Institute in Vienna, Austria.
Dogs were previously thought to
follow human gazes only when food or toys were involved. Now, a new study
suggests dogs also follow human gazes into blank space—but only if they're
untrained.
"We know they should be able
to do it," says Wallis, leader of the research published in August in the journal Animal
Behaviour, but training was the "missing piece of the
puzzle."
In recent experiments, Wallis and
her colleagues recruited 145 pet border collies with a range of training levels
and ages. The researchers wanted to see if age, habituation, or training
influenced the dog's tendency to follow a human's gaze.
Wallis then observed the dogs'
reactions as she gazed toward a door. Surprisingly, only the untrained border
collies followed her gaze—the trained animals ignored it. That may be because
trained dogs learn to focus on a person's face, and not where the person is
looking.
When Wallis and colleagues spent
just five minutes teaching the untrained dogs to look at her face, they began
ignoring the instinct to follow her gaze.
Even more surprising is that the
untrained dogs often glanced back and forth between her and the door, baffled
at what she was looking at. The behavior, only seen before in humans and
chimps, is called "check backs" or "double looking," she
said.
"It's a lesson for us all that
we should always examine whether training has an effect in these types of
studies," says Wallis.
Next Steps in
Dog Research
In humans, aging hastens declines
in short-term memory and logical reasoning skills, making it more difficult to
learn new tasks. Previous research has found similar declines in dogs, but
long-term memory is a little-known aspect of dog biology.
That's why Wallis and colleagues
are studying how dogs both young and old memorize tasks, and whether the
animals can remember them months later.
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