💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 631.gmi captured on 2023-06-16 at 21:26:12. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Pet dogs can 'catch' human yawns

2008-08-06 10:06:46

By Jennifer Carpenter

Science reporter, BBC News

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Dogs 'catch' human yawns

Yawning is known to be contagious in humans but now scientists have shown that

pet dogs can catch a yawn, too.

The copying activity suggests that canines are capable of empathising with

people, say the researchers who recorded dogs' behaviour in lab tests.

Until now, only humans and their close primate relatives were thought to find

yawning contagious.

The team - from Birkbeck College, University of London - reports its findings

in Biology Letters.

Yawning, although sometimes a response to extreme stress, is more often a sign

of tiredness; but the reason for why yawning is catching is not fully

understood.

Human cues

There is evidence that autistic individuals are less inclined to yawn into

response to another human yawning, suggesting that contagious yawning betrays

an ability to empathise, explained Birbeck's Dr Atsushi Senju.

Dr Senju and his team wondered whether dogs - that are very skilled at reading

human social cues - could read the human yawn signal, and set out to test the

yawning capabilities of 29 canines.

The team created two conditions, each five minutes long, in which a person -

who was a stranger to the dog - was sat in front of the animal and asked to

call its name. Under the first condition, the stranger yawned once the dogs had

made eye contact with them.

"We gave dogs everything: visual and auditory stimulus to induce them to yawn,"

Dr Senju, told BBC News.

Under the second condition, the same procedure was followed, but this time the

stranger opened and closed their mouth but did not yawn.

This was a precaution to ensure that dogs were not responding to an open mouth,

explained Dr Senju.

Yawning yet?

The team found that 21 out of 29 dogs yawned when the stranger in front of them

yawned - on average, dogs yawned 1.9 times. By contrast, no dogs yawned during

the non-yawning condition.

The researchers believe that these results are the first evidence that dogs

have the capacity to empathise with humans; although the team could not rule

out stress-induced yawning - they hope to in future studies.

"Dogs have a very special capacity to read human communication. They respond

when we point and when we signal," Dr Senju told BBC News.

The researchers explained that along with floppy ears and big soppy-eyes,

humans have selected dogs to be obedient and docile. The results from this

study suggest the capacity for empathy towards humans is another trait selected

in dogs during domestication.

Dr Senju thinks that these traits would have been useful to humans when they

began to live side-by-side with canines approximately 15,000 years ago.