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Dogs recognize the dog species among several other species on a computer screen
Individuals from the same species get together for social life. These gatherings require recognition of similarities between individuals who belong to the same species and to a certain group. Research to date has shown that in some species, individuals recognize more easily, or are more attracted by images of, individuals belonging to their own species than those belonging to another species.
Autier-Derian and team studied this phenomenon among domestic dogs, which have the largest morphological variety among all animal species. Indeed, more than 400 pure breeds of dogs have been registered. The authors explored whether this large morphological diversity presented a cognitive challenge to dogs trying to recognize their species, when confronted with other species, using visual cues alone.
On a computer screen, the researchers showed nine pet dogs pictures of faces from various dog breeds and cross-breeds, and simultaneously faces of other animal species, including human faces. They exposed the dogs to diverse stimuli: images of dog faces; images of non-dog species from 40 different species, including domestic and wild animals; and humans. Overall, the dogs were shown more than 144 pairs of pictures to select from. The authors observed whether the nine dogs could discriminate any type of dog from other species, and could group all dogs together, whatever their breed, into a single category.
The results suggest that dogs can form a visual category of dog faces and group pictures of very different dogs into a single category, despite the diversity in dog breeds. Indeed, all nine dogs were able to group all the images of dogs within the same category.
The authors conclude: “The fact that dogs are able to recognize their own species visually, and that they have great olfactory discriminative capacities, insures that social behavior and mating between different breeds is still potentially possible. Although humans have stretched the Canis familiaris species to its morphological limits, its biological entity has been preserved.”
Reference:
Autier-Dérian D et al (2013). Visual discrimination of species in dogs. Animal Cognition; DOI 10.1007/s10071-013-0600-8
Oh yeah they do. My pug would go nuts when he seen other dogs on tv. Dogs are way smarter then ppl think. One of my good friends had to get rid of her dog cause her child was allergic, she gave him to a family member who lived about 60 miles away from here. The dog got loose and ran away and she was afraid to tell her. Two days later that dog had come 60 miles home. Now tell me they ain’t smart. Had I not seen it for myself I would not have believed it.