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Dogs Understand Human Perspective, Study Suggests

Dogs Understand Human Perspective, Study Suggests | Science News | Scoop.it

A recent study reveals that dogs are much likely to steal food in the dark when humans cannot notice them, indicating they understand a human's perspective.

 

The study, conducted by Dr. Juliane Kaminski of the University of Portsmouth's Department of Psychology, claims that when humans forbid the dog from eating the food, he is four times more likely to steal the food that he was forbidden to eat in the dark. This behavior in dogs reveals that they can change their actions based on what humans think and feel. They take into account what humans can see and what they cannot.

 

"That's incredible because it implies dogs understand the human can't see them, meaning they might understand the human perspective," Dr. Kaminski said in a press statement.

 

This study, funded by the Max Planck Society, is the first that describes how dogs distinguish between different levels of light when they are making strategies to steal food. According to Dr. Kaminski, humans attribute a few qualities and emotions to other living things. It is we who think that the dogs are clever or sensitive, not the dogs themselves.

 

A series of experiments were conducted in different light conditions. In each test, the humans forbade the dog from eating the food. On conducting these tests, she noticed that the dog ate more food in the dark and that too quickly, as compared to when the room was lit.

 

The study had 42 female and 42 male domestic dogs who were 1-year-old or more. She made sure she selected those dogs that were comfortable without their owner, even if it was a dark room. The report states that the tests were complex and involved many variables to rule out that dogs were basing their decisions on simple associative rules, for example, that dark means food. It is not known how well dogs can see in the dark, but the study shows that they can differentiate between light and dark.

 

The researcher concludes saying, "The results of these tests suggest that dogs are deciding it's safer to steal the food when the room is dark because they understand something of the human's perspective." Further studies have to be conducted in order to discover the mechanism that controls the dog's behavior. Previous studies have indicated that dogs consider human's eyes as an important signal in deciding how to behave. For those people who are attentive toward dogs, the animal responds more willingly.

 


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald
Greg Wurn's comment, February 14, 2013 3:33 PM
I lived on a property with tall open forest all around for 20 years, my dogs used to regurlary chase after other animals that came near the camp, they would tear off into what appeared to me to be pitch dark, not once in 20 years did any of my dogs injure themselves on fallen branches etc, I suspect that they can see very well in the dark !
Vasileios Basios's comment, February 18, 2013 8:16 AM
... but not vice versa .. we can safely pressume ;-)
KathyTarochione's curator insight, March 4, 2013 4:35 PM

Charlie could have told you this.  He knows it's true.  Hey, just ask Charlie.

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Paralyzed Dogs Made to Walk Again After Nose Cell Transplant (Yes, From Their Noses)

Paralyzed Dogs Made to Walk Again After Nose Cell Transplant (Yes, From Their Noses) | Science News | Scoop.it
The beauty of science and technology is that things that seemed impossible in living memory are now regularly done.
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Babies Are Healthier When There Is a Dog at Home: Research

Babies Are Healthier When There Is a Dog at Home: Research | Science News | Scoop.it
New research published in Pediatrics suggests that children living with a dog are significantly healthier than those living without it.
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Domestic dogs display empathic response to distress in humans

Domestic dogs display empathic response to distress in humans | Science News | Scoop.it

 Research from Goldsmiths, University of London suggests domestic dogs express empathic behaviour when confronted with humans in distress.

 

The study also found that the dogs responded to the person who was crying regardless of whether it was their owner or the unfamiliar person: "If the dogs' approaches during the crying condition were motivated by self-oriented comfort-seeking, they would be more likely to approach their usual source of comfort, their owner, rather than the stranger," said Jennifer. "No such preference was found. The dogs approached whoever was crying regardless of their identity. Thus they were responding to the person's emotion, not their own needs, which is suggestive of empathic-like comfort-offering behaviour.


Via Edwin Rutsch
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Dogs may have helped Humans beat the Neanderthals

Dogs may have helped Humans beat the Neanderthals | Science News | Scoop.it

After analyzing the Mellars and French paper and comparing it with the extant literature, Shipman has come to an intriguing conclusion: that humans' comparative evolutionary fitness owes itself to the domestication of dogs.

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[VIDEO] What is your dog thinking? Brain scans unleash canine secrets in Emory study

This is a video documenting how we trained 2 dogs to go in the MRI scanner for fMRI without restraints or sedation (check out the music video too: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DTqbLwSwVU). The goal of The Dog Project is to use fMRI to decode the dog-human relationship from the dog's perspective

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Powered by poo: Students use dog waste to light park

Powered by poo: Students use dog waste to light park | Science News | Scoop.it

Dogs meet and greet at the Cosmo dog park in Gilbert, Ariz. ASU students have developed a way to use dog waste to power a light at the park.

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Like humans, dogs engage in riskier behaviors when their self-control is depleted

Like humans, dogs engage in riskier behaviors when their self-control is depleted | Science News | Scoop.it

How do dogs behave when their ability to exert self-control is compromised? Are they more likely to approach dangerous situations or stay well away? According to a new study by Holly Miller, from the University of Lille Nord de France, and colleagues, dogs that have 'run out' of self-control make more impulsive decisions that put them in harm's way. The work was just published online in Springer's Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.

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Dogs Play the Piano in Video | Piano-Playing Golden Retrievers on YouTube | Bizarre News | LifesLittleMysteries.com

Dogs Play the Piano in Video | Piano-Playing Golden Retrievers on YouTube | Bizarre News | LifesLittleMysteries.com | Science News | Scoop.it
In a new YouTube video, a pair of golden retrievers plays a song on an oversize piano. An animal behaviorist discusses whether or not it sounds like music to them.
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Study finds the love of a dog or cat helps women cope with HIV/AIDS

Study finds the love of a dog or cat helps women cope with HIV/AIDS | Science News | Scoop.it
A spoonful of medicine goes down a lot easier if there is a dog or cat around.
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Video: Rescuing Disaster Victims With Snake Robots Deployed By Dogs | Popular Science

Video: Rescuing Disaster Victims With Snake Robots Deployed By Dogs | Popular Science | Science News | Scoop.it

A new project at Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute combines two of my favorite things, dogs and robots, to build an animal-machine rescue system that could conceivably improve a trapped victim’s survival odds after an earthquake or some other disaster. It would work by strapping a snakebot to a trained search-and-rescue dog, Saint Bernard collar-keg-style, and letting the dog loose to find survivors.

Articles about robotics: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=robotics

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Study Finds Infantlike Understanding in Dogs

Study Finds Infantlike Understanding in Dogs | Science News | Scoop.it
How dogs in a new study responded to a woman’s greeting depended on whether she looked at them.
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Dog with a perfect pitch plays piano [VIDEO]

Dog with perfect pitch plays piano pretty proficiently.


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald
Jayne Fenton Keane's comment, January 8, 2013 5:55 AM
cute
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Visions Of The Future: Carl Rinsch Creates Robot Dogs Remotely Controlled By Humans

Visions Of The Future: Carl Rinsch Creates Robot Dogs Remotely Controlled By Humans | Science News | Scoop.it

What do you get when you mix Lady Gaga-esque/Steampunk fashion, Thriller-inspired dance music, a futuristic interface for controlling racing robotic greyhounds, and heavy product placement for vodka? Just the latest work by Carl Erik Rinsch, a commercial director who has mastered the art of storytelling with strong images, minimal use of words, and immersive, engaging style.

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Dogs demonstrate empathy to crying strangers

Dogs demonstrate empathy to crying strangers | Science News | Scoop.it
Looking at long-held owner beliefs, a study suggests that dogs comforted crying strangers in ways similar to human infants.
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Angry People Linked to Aggressive Dogs

Angry People Linked to Aggressive Dogs | Science News | Scoop.it
If you are a disagreeable person you might gravitate to aggressive dogs, such as boxers, bull terriers or pit bulls, researchers have found at a recent study done by the University of Leicester’s School of Psychology.
Sakis Koukouvis's comment, May 27, 2012 5:04 AM
olsen jay nelson Yes, we need the meeting between the common and the scientific knowledge
olsen jay nelson's comment, June 1, 2012 1:28 AM
I agree in part with that, Sakis; I do lament the shift from knowledge-oriented science to the more pragmatic concerns that require effective outcomes beyond mere illumination within the lens of scientific enquiry, etc — filling in the gaps, as it were. The power of the funding bodies to decide on resource allocation is one of the main driving forces of that, and it’s sad as it leaves a lot untouched. However, I also appreciate the underwhelming nature of some of the common-knowledge results of science for some of those both inside and outside the academy. In a scarcity-based reality, priorities tend to take precedence; this often ends up favouring action-oriented R&D. We need more examinations of common sense, as you say, for a variety of reasons, but priority rank-ordering is still probably necessary and sensible … more or less … and until we reach a post-scarcity or, at least, a resource-rich reality that can cope with broader scope, lol!
Sakis Koukouvis's comment, June 2, 2012 3:50 AM
Thank you Olsen. I appreciate your point of view
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Dogs Feel Your Pain

Dogs Feel Your Pain | Science News | Scoop.it

Yawn next to your dog, and she may do the same. Though it seems simple, this contagious behavior is actually quite remarkable: Only a few animals do it, and only dogs cross the species barrier. Now a new study finds that dogs yawn even when they only hear the sound of us yawning, the strongest evidence yet that canines may be able to empathize with us.

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Dogs, But Not Wolves, Use Humans As Tools

Dogs, But Not Wolves, Use Humans As Tools | Science News | Scoop.it

It is probably no accident that the relationship between dogs and their owners mirrors the attachment relationship between parents and their children, behaviorally and physiologically. Indeed, humans who have strong bonds with their dogs have higher levels of oxytocin in their urine than those with weaker bonds.

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Dogs Are Manipulable, Cats Are Manipulative, and Both Act Like Babies

Dogs Are Manipulable, Cats Are Manipulative, and Both Act Like Babies | Science News | Scoop.it

After thousands of years living in our homes, cats and dogs have gotten pretty good at tuning into human social cues—as good as as human babies anyways.

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Man's Best Friend May Be His Best Co-Worker, Too

Man's Best Friend May Be His Best Co-Worker, Too | Science News | Scoop.it
It's long been known that owning a pet can be good for your mental and physical health, but new research indicates that it can also make your office a much happier and productive place.
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Dogs' feet give Japan scientists paws for thought

Dogs' feet give Japan scientists paws for thought | Science News | Scoop.it

Ever wonder how dogs can walk barefoot in the snow? Now a Japanese scientist may have the answer -- an internal central heating system.

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How dogs interpret human communication

How dogs interpret human communication | Science News | Scoop.it
Sit a dog in front of a television screen, and it may not always look intently at what it sees. But show a person on that screen who looks directly at the dog and says "hello," and the canine will pay attention.
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Sick People Smell Bad: Why dogs sniff dogs, humans sniff humans, and dogs sometimes sniff humans

Sick People Smell Bad: Why dogs sniff dogs, humans sniff humans, and dogs sometimes sniff humans | Science News | Scoop.it

“The smell of a body is the (bacteria themselves) which we breathe in with our nose and mouth, which we suddenly possess as though (they) were (the body’s) most secret substance and, to put the matter in a nutshell, its nature. The smell which is in me is the fusion of the (bacteria) with my body…”

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In the Eyes of a Dog - ScienceNOW

In the Eyes of a Dog - ScienceNOW | Science News | Scoop.it

Sit a dog in front of a television screen, and it may not always look intently at what it sees. But show a person on that screen who looks directly at the dog and says "hello," and the canine will pay attention. In fact, a new study shows that a dog will go so far as to follow the gaze of the human on screen when he or she looks to one side or the other—something not even chimps can do.

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