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Tests show dogs are almost human
By Leigh Deighton, Elizabeth Colman
February 16, 2004

IF YOU think your dog can read your mind, you're
right. Because pooches and people have kept company
for hundreds of generations, Canis familiaris is
hard-wired to pick up human social cues, a US
anthropologist claims.

Researchers found dogs have evolved an unusual ability
to read human gestures.

According to Brian Hare of Harvard University, the
insight will help trace the evolution of dogs, and may
help explain the origins of autism in people and point
towards possible therapies.

"The first diagnostic test for autism is the inability
to use social cues," he said. "Autists are very poor
at reading things like eye-gaze or pointing, something
called joint attention."

Not so your average mutt, he says. "It looks like dogs
evolved an unusual ability to read human gestures and
cues, and manipulate and predict human behaviour.

"They were selected to do that through domestication,"
Dr Hare told the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, meeting in Seattle - and he
has the evidence to prove it.

In the first two of four studies, Dr Hare and
colleagues in Germany and Hungary found dogs are
better at a test of their ability to interpret social
cues than even our primate cousins the chimpanzees,
and the dog's closest relation, the wolf.

In the test - based on one developed to identify
autistic infants - food is hidden beneath one of two
cups about a metre apart. The animal is then shown
where the food is by the experimenter, who looks or
gestures at the right location.

"The wolves and the chimps didn't use the cues in the
task, but the dogs were awesome," Dr Hare said.

Clearly, wolves and chimpanzees are not stupid, and
dogs did not inherit their skill from ancestral
wolves. So Dr Hare next tested the possibility that
dogs learn their ability through "tremendous exposure
to humans".

He gave two groups of puppies nine to 20 weeks old the
same test. One group was raised by a family, while the
other was raised in a kennel with little human
contact. The isolated puppies performed just as well
as dogs raised in a family, scotching the exposure
hypothesis.

Dr Hare says his latest research confirmed his belief
that human contact during domestication created the
selective pressure driving the evolution of this
canine expertise.

The cup test was given to six New Guinea singing dogs,
a species related to the dingo and isolated from
humans. The six domestic dogs were near-perfect, but
the singers failed. This suggests that without human
evolutionary pressure, the singing dog lost its
ability to read human minds.

The Australian