BrainStuff Classics: Do Dogs Use Facial Expressions to Communicate with Us? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Do Dogs Use Facial Expressions to Communicate with Us?

Oct 24, 20213 min
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Episode description

It seems that dogs make more expressive faces when humans are watching. Are they trying to communicate? Learn more in this classic episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://animals.howstuffworks.com/pets/dogs-make-more-expressive-faces-when-we-watch.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hi brain Stuff, I'm Lauren Fogelbaum. In today's episode is another classic from our archives. In this one, we talk about what I have to Imagine was one of the most fun research studies to participate in in recent history, at the very least, which delved into how dogs use facial expressions to communicate with us humans. Hey, brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbam here. If you're like me, you love dogs, possibly

more than people. Some days, their warm eyes and doggie grins have me wrapped around their fluffy pupper tails, and according to new research from the University of Portsmouth's Dog Cognition Center, dogs deliberately make more facial expressions when we're watching them, and it could be their way to communicate with us. The study was led by Dr Julienne Kaminski

and published in a sen issue of Scientific Reports. Kaminski and her research team came to their conclusion after watching twenty four different dogs, all family pets of varying breeds and ages. Each dog was filmed individually in a room with a person who went through various scenarios including looking at the dog, looking away from the dog, and giving

the dog food. The scientists then studied the dog's facial expressions using the Dog Facial Action Coding System or Dog FACTS, which is a scientific tool for coding canines facial movements. It was adapted from the FACTS system created for humans back in Kaminsky and her team discovered that each dog made animated faces when the person in the room was looking at it, including raising its eyebrows and sticking out its tongue, a much more than when the person's back

was turned. In a press statement, Dr Kaminsky said the findings appear to support evidence that dogs are sensitive to humans attention and that expressions are potentially active attempts to communicate, not simple emotional displays. Most surprisingly is that even the presence of food didn't influence the dogs as much as human affection. Kaminski said, we knew domestic dogs paid attention

to how attentive a human is. In a previous study, we found, for example, the dogs stole food more often when the human's eyes were closed or when they had their back turned. In another study, we found dogs follow the gaze of a human if the human first establishes eye contact with the dog, so the dog knows that the gaze shift is directed at them. Kavinski says it's possible that the expressions of dogs have changed as they've become more domesticated, but the study does have its limits.

Twenty four canines makes for a small study sample, so it's likely that more dogs should be studied to confirm these findings, which sounds like an excellent research session to me. Today's episode is based on the article dogs make more expressive faces when humans are watching on how stuff works

dot com, written by Elea Hoyt. Brain Stuff is production of by Heart Radio and partnership with how staff works dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler clang Or more podcast It's my Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. H

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