A new study demonstrated dogs do not reciprocate food-giving, nor do they act more favorably toward a friendly human.
After 14,000 years of domestication, dogs have an edge in both cognition and people-reading skills over wolves.
Trained scent detection dogs are able to detect organic compounds associated with COVID-19 in patients. Researchers report the dogs are better at detecting coronavirus infection than standard tests.
The living environment has a significant impact on the skin microbiota, but not gut bacteria, in both humans and dogs.
Using aversive stimuli and punishments to train dogs leads to increased stress and anxiety in the animals.
Dog owners whose pets are diabetic are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes than those with healthier pets. The study supports the hypothesis that pet owners may share certain behaviors, such as physical activity level, with their pet.
fMRI study reveals dogs do not have a specific face area similar to that of primates. Dogs' brain activity showed little response to faces but increased in response to seeing another dog over a human.
Stray, untrained dogs respond to gestures given by humans. The findings suggest that dog/human understanding may transcend learning.
Exposure to household pet dogs in the early years of life was associated with a significantly decreased risk of being diagnosed with schizophrenia later in life.
fMRI neuroimaging reveals the parietotemporal cortex of dogs responds to numeric concepts. The study provides evidence that numerosity is a shared evolutionary neural mechanism.
The human ability to recognize the facial expressions of dogs is acquired through age and experience and is not an evolutionarily selected trait.
Evidence suggests new dog owners experience a reduction in negative mood and feelings of loneliness.