In my experience, dogs are profoundly moral creatures, and most people
could learn much from them.

--S.

http://www.dailymai
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1047481/Living-humans-taught
-dogs-morals-say-scientists.html>
l.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1047481/Living-humans-taught-dogs-morals-say-sci
entists.html

Living with humans has taught dogs morals, say scientists

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 6:39 AM on 21st August 2008

Dogs are developing a sense of fair play, scientists have found

Dogs are becoming more intelligent and are even learning morals from
human contact, scientists claim.

They say the fact that dogs' play rarely escalates into a fight shows
the animals abide by social rules.

During one study, dogs which held up a paw were rewarded with a food treat.

When a lone dog was asked to raise its paw but received no treat, the
researchers found it begged for up to 30 minutes.

But when they tested two dogs together but rewarded only one, the dog
which missed out soon stopped playing the game.

Dr Friederike Range, of the University of Vienna, who led the study,
said: 'Dogs show a strong aversion to inequity. I would prefer not to
call it a sense of fairness, but others might.'

The first Canine Science Forum in Budapest was attended by more than 200
experts to discuss what is going on inside the mind of a dog.

Human's inclination to invest dogs with human-like states of mind isn't
as unscientific as it might appear as they really do have some
remarkable mental skills that allow them to thrive in their strange
habitat - our world.

Domestic dogs evolved from grey wolves as recently as 10,000 years ago
since when their brains have shrunk so a wolf-sized dog has a brain
around 10 per cent smaller than its wild ancestor.

Dr Peter Pongracz from Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, and
colleagues have produced evidence dog barks contain information that
people can understand.

They found even people who have never owned a dog can recognise the
emotional 'meaning' of barks produced in various situations, such as
when playing, left alone and confronted by a stranger.

His team has now developed a computer program that can aggregate
hundreds of barks recorded in various settings and boil them down to
their basic acoustic ingredients.

They found each of the different types of bark has distinct patterns of
frequency, tonality and pulsing, and that an artificial neural network
can use these features to correctly identify a bark it has never
encountered before.

This is further evidence that barking conveys information about a dog's
mental state, reports New Scientist magazine.

They also discovered people can correctly identify aggregated barks as
conveying happiness, loneliness or aggression.

'Even children from the age of six who have never had a dog recognise
these patterns,' says Dr Pongracz.

Dogs are not just able to 'speak' to us - they can also understand some
aspects of human communication.

At the forum in Budapest, Dr Akiko Takaoka from Kyoto University in
Japan described as-yet unpublished work that examined what is going on
inside a dog's mind when it hears a stranger's voice.

She played dogs a series of recordings of unfamiliar voices - both male
and female - with each voice followed by a photo of a human face on a
screen.

If the gender of the face did not match that of the voice, the dogs
stared longer, a sign that their expectations had been violated.

Dr Takaoka said: 'This suggests dogs generate an internal visual
representation of a male or female correlated with the voice.' She
suggests that this ability to infer information about a person from
their voice alone might help dogs communicate with people.

It is generally accepted that a few other animals, including great apes,
are capable of this mind reading to some extent, but it is nevertheless
a quality reserved for only the most intelligent of species.

But Dr Alexandra Horowitz from Barnard College in New York prefers the
term "theory of behaviour" to describe dogs' apparent insight.

She said: 'I think there is a massive territory between a theory of mind
and a theory of behaviour.'

Her own recent study illustrates the point - when dogs play together,
they use appropriate signals for grabbing attention or signalling the
desire to play depending on their playmate's apparent level of
attention, such as whether it is facing them or side-on.

That could be interpreted as mind reading, she admits, but a simpler
explanation is that dogs are reading body language and reacting in
stereotyped ways.



 


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