Source - http://news.yahoo.com/
By - Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods
Category - Hotels Near Marlins Park
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By - Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods
Category - Hotels Near Marlins Park
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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Brian Hare is an evolutionary anthropologist and Vanessa Woods
is a research scientist, both at Duke University. Together, they
founded Dognition,
a website that helps owners find the genius in their dogs. Some of the
content from this post is adapted from their New York Times bestselling
book The Genius of Dogs. Hare and Woods contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.
Dogs may be even more connected
to humans than people have realized: A new study from Japan and results
from the Dognition citizen-science project both show that dogs yawn
contagiously, and dogs that are bonded with people are more likely to
yawn when they do.
Yawning is one of the more bizarre biological
functions in humans and other animals. No one knows why we do it. Some
say it increases oxygen. Others say it is linked to controlling brain
temperature. Maybe it stretches the mouth and throat, or keeps us alert.
The strangest thing about yawning is that it's contagious. Seeing or
hearing someone yawn, or even reading about yawning often leads to an
irresistible urge to yawn. And it's not random: You're more likely to
yawn contagiously when someone you love yawns than when a stranger does.
Does your dog yawn contagiously
Humans are acutely susceptible to the emotions of others. People are
more likely to laugh when they see someone laughing, and cry if they see
someone in distress. This is also known as empathy. Empathy is one of
the best human qualities. It encourages good behavior and prevents
harmful acts. Empathy is not something that is taught; it is present
even in young children, and grows and strengthens throughout life.
In humans, "contagious yawning" — yawning after seeing someone else yawn
— is positively correlated to empathy scores. Contagious yawning has
also been shown to correlate with tests on self-recognition and theory
of mind. The absence of contagious yawning can signify a developmental
delay in children.
An interesting question is whether animals are also capable of
empathy. This is difficult to measure, since animals can't tell us how
they are feeling. But because contagious yawning is related to empathy
scores in humans, there have been several researchers who have used
contagious yawning as a measure of empathy, at least in a basic form, in
animals.
Besides primates, only two species have been shown to
yawn contagiously. One of them, perhaps not surprisingly, is the dog(the
other is the Australian budgerigar). Initial studies produced
conflicting results as to whether or not dogs yawned contagiously. And
when dogs did yawn contagiously, researchers questioned whether this was
a sign of stress, rather than empathy.
However, a new study from
Teresa Romero and colleagues from the University of Tokyo found that
not only do dogs yawn contagiously, but their yawning does not seem to
be a sign of stress — and, like humans, they are more likely to yawn
with someone they are emotionally bonded to.
In that study, the
researchers had 25 dogs watch the yawning of either their owner or a
stranger. A heart-rate monitor measured the levels of stress in the
dogs. Just over half of the dogs yawned contagiously (54 percent). Dogs
yawned more frequently when their owner yawned, showing that the
emotional connection between dogs and their owners produces a stronger
response. There was no significant increase in heart rate in the dogs
during the experiment, so the dogs' yawning did not seem to be stress
related.
These results are echoed in our results from Dognition.
Of the 250 participants in the beta program, 20 percent of the dogs
yawned. The difference between the two studies was likely due to a
slightly different method of examining individual yawning (the Romero
study recorded dogs 5 minutes after the human yawned, while participants
in Dognition recorded 2 minutes after the owner yawned).
Also,
in Dognition, there was a link between the yawn test and a dog's cunning
scores, which measures how dogs use their owners' attention to deceive
them. Dogs that were skilled at reading their owner's body language, and
at using this information to their own advantage, were also more likely
to yawn.

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