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Here some ideas for you I found in the internet for you. http://www.spring.org.uk/2007/08/human-dog-psychology-5-weird-studies.php -- -- - - - [Here is a small excerpt for you from this website.] - - - - - - Cat or dog? If I have to choose, I choose dog. It seems, if pushed, most academic research psychologists choose dog as well. I say that because there are quite a few studies about how we interact with dogs but hardly any (none?) about cats. So, here's my five favourite studies on the psychology of human-dog interaction. 1. Is talking to a dog like talking to a baby? Are these people talking to their babies or their dogs: "Coochie-coochie-coooo!" "Who's a clever little boy?" "Oh my God, the living room carpet is ruined!" Difficult to tell right? So Mitchell (2001) thought, which is why he decided to compare how people talk to infants with how they talk to dogs. He found both similarities and differences: Similarities: high-pitched voice, repetitive use of grammatically acceptable words, present-tense verbs. Differences: Dog-talk involved shorter sentences and more orders while baby-talk included more questions. Which all raises the question of whether we're treating our babies like dogs or our dogs like babies. Either way, the authors point out the main problem in talking to both babies and dogs is it "involve[s] communicating with a limited and inattentive addressee." I think that's a bit harsh on dogs. 2. Do we think dogs understand us? What with all that baby-talk going on, you'd think that dogs would pick up the odd word or two. To examine people's perceptions of their dog's understanding Pongracz, Miklosi and Csanyi (2001) gave Hungarian dog-owners a questionnaire. It asked them to rate the types of utterances they thought their dogs could understand. Top of the list came questions, followed by permissions and information giving. It seems these dogs are regular little Lassies. But what proof is there that they really understand? Well, we can only tell by how the dog responds. So, next the authors asked dog-owners how often their dogs demonstrated understanding by obeying a command. Our hardy Hungarian dog-owners reckoned: * Dogs obeyed 31% of the time under all circumstances. * Dogs obeyed 53% of the time when the context was right Seems pretty high to me. Or perhaps Hungarian dogs are very smart. 3. Are dogs ice-breakers? Even if dogs can't understand what we're saying they're still fantastic props for starting conversations. When taking a dog for a walk, you can't help getting chatting to people. OK, so you're mainly apologising to parents as your dog mauls their children, but at least its social contact, right? The evidence for this one is provided by Rogers, Hart and Boltz (1993) in an observational study of elderly dog walkers. They found dog owners have more conversations in which, surprise surprise, they often talked about their dogs. Not only that, but dog owners tended to report higher satisfaction with their emotional, social and physical states. So not only do dogs start conversations, they may also make you healthier. 4. Do dogs resemble their owners? I recently covered a study finding that couples come to resemble each other facially over time. So what about dogs and their owners? There are a few studies on this - well actually there's three academic articles and just one study. a. Roy and Christenfeld (2004) find that, yes, dogs do resemble their owners, but only if they're purebreds - that's the dogs now, not the owners. So, the old chestnut is true. Hooray! b. Levine (2005), reanalysing the data collected in the first study, say no - there's problems with Roy and Christenfeld's (2004) study. This means we can't yet be sure purebred dogs resemble their owners. A new study is required. Booo. c. The authors of the original study say yes their original study was correct (Roy & Christenfeld, 2005). Hooray! (I think?) The world still awaits the conclusion... - - - - - - - - -
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Absofreakinglutely!! When I was living with a friend of mine, she brought a new guy over and my dog (who is also usually extremely docile) flipped out. He was so intent that this guy was not to come near me or my friend that I had to put him up in the other room, where he continued to raise a ruckus until this person left. Turns out this guy was missing a couple of marbles, and seriously turned out to be a stalker...he was really frightening. My dog called it first, I will never doubt his judgement again.
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