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20-11-2018
Column: Living with Dogs - CANINE INTELLIGENCE AND EMOTION
Column: Living with Dogs - CANINE INTELLIGENCE AND EMOTION
Canine intelligence and emotion
Intelligence scientists have begun to probe how dogs think. Biologists and psychologists interested in canine intelligence are examining the more complex things dogs’ brains can do. For example, guide dogs depend on their ability to “think outside the box” to predict what is going to happen next in the ever-changing environment of their owners.

What is becoming clear is how domestication has affected dog’s intelligence and why it seems to mesh so well with our own.

Primatologists have come to realise that domestic dogs can outperform chimpanzees in some very specific ways. Yet overall chimps seem more intelligent (however that is defined). Some have proposed that dogs have a special brand of intelligence, unique in the animal kingdom, which they co-evolved with us humans.

In one study word learning abilities of dogs was comparable to that of a two-three-year-old child. Comparing cognitive abilities between children and dogs is not necessarily helpful as it seems just a short

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