Study: “Smarter” dogs think more like humans to overcome their biases

Both the shape of a dog’s head and cognitive ability determine degree of spatial bias.

dog in a harness approaching a blue dish on the floor

Enlarge / Look at this very good boy taking a test to determine the origin of his spatial bias for a study on how dogs think. (credit: Eniko Kubinyi)

Research has shown that if you point at an object, a dog will interpret the gesture as a directional cue, unlike a human toddler, who will more likely focus on the object itself. It's called spatial bias, and a recent paper published in the journal Ethology offers potential explanations for why dogs interpret the gesture the way that they do. According to researchers at Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary, the phenomenon arises from a combination of how dogs see (visual acuity) and how they think, with "smarter" dog breeds prioritizing an object's appearance as much as its location. This suggests the smarter dogs' information processing is more similar to humans.

The authors wanted to investigate whether spatial bias in dogs is sensory or cognitive, or a combination of the two. "Very early on, children interpret the gesture as pointing to the object, while dogs take the pointing as a directional cue," said co-author Ivaylo Iotchev. "In other words, regardless of the intention of the person giving the cue, the meaning for children and dogs is different. This phenomenon has previously been observed in dogs using a variety of behavioral tests, ranging from simple associative learning to imitation, but it had never been studied per se."

Their experimental sample consisted of dogs used in a previous 2018 study plus dogs participating specifically in the new study, for a total of 82 dogs. The dominant breeds were border collies (19), vizslas (17), and whippets (6). Each animal was brought into a small empty room with their owner and one of the experimenters present. The experimenter stood 3 meters away from the dog and owner. There was a training period using different plastic plates to teach the dogs to associate either the presence or absence of an object, or its spatial location, with the presence or absence of food. Then they tested the dogs on a series of tasks.

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Die wandernde Erde II: Leb wohl, Sonnensystem!

Vier Jahre nach dem ersten Film kommt nun das Prequel von Die wandernde Erde ins Kino. Wegen der Effekte lohnt sich das, sonst eher nicht. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Digitalkino)

Vier Jahre nach dem ersten Film kommt nun das Prequel von Die wandernde Erde ins Kino. Wegen der Effekte lohnt sich das, sonst eher nicht. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Digitalkino)

Daily Telescope: A simple shot of the Milky Way high above France and Spain

“Both the daytime and nighttime vistas there were just bloody marvelous.”

The Milky Way Galaxy above the Pyrenees, right on the French and Spanish border.

Enlarge / The Milky Way Galaxy above the Pyrenees, right on the French and Spanish border. (credit: bulbs_01_frizzle)

Welcome to the Daily Telescope. There is a little too much darkness in this world and not enough light, a little too much pseudoscience and not enough science. We'll let other publications offer you a daily horoscope. At Ars Technica, we're going to take a different route, finding inspiration from very real images of a universe that is filled with stars and wonder.

Good morning. It's December 21, and today's image showcases our very own Milky Way Galaxy above the Pyrenees mountain range, which separates Spain from the rest of Europe.

It was sent in by a reader who captured it while hiking through the mountains and in their words bivvying—a new word for "minimalist camping" that I learned about five minutes ago. I'm jealous. Hiking through the Pyrenees and gazing at the stars at night sounds like a wonderful dream. The photographer told me they are no great astrophotographer, but that the skies were so dark and brilliant that even this single exposure photo taken with a Fuji X100 APS camera looks stunning.

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CMF Watch Pro im Test: Nothings erste Smartwatch braucht noch Feinschliff

Nothings erste Smartwatch ist ein preiswertes Wearable mit ausreichendem Funktionsumfang – bei der Software muss aber noch nachgebessert werden. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (Nothing, Test)

Nothings erste Smartwatch ist ein preiswertes Wearable mit ausreichendem Funktionsumfang - bei der Software muss aber noch nachgebessert werden. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (Nothing, Test)