Inside the science of how dogs think

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Sit! Shake! Quit barking! Get off the couch! Go find your toy!

Ever wonder what your dog is thinking as it gazes at you while you are barking commands?

Duke University’s Canine Cognition Center in Durham, North Carolina, is one of the few labs in the country focused on how dogs think.

“We’re excited about describing the psychology of our dogs,” says professor Brian Hare, the lab’s director. “Different dogs solve different problems differently. And what we want to understand is: What is it that either makes dogs remarkable as a species or what is it that constrains the ability of dogs to solve problems?”

o test the dogs’ ability, Hare and a team of graduate students put dogs through a variety of games similar to those you might play with young children.

“We don’t want to look at cute pet tricks. What we want to know is, what does the dog understand about its world?” Hare said.

Hare has been analyzing our four-legged friends for about 15 years. He says dogs have figured out how to read human behavior and human gestures better than any other species has, even chimpanzees.

“The way they think about their world is that people are super important and they can solve almost any problem if they rely on people,” says Hare.

“They are a very different species and they think about the world differently than we do. And we need to figure out what are the constraints on how they solve problems, how is it that they think differently from us.”

Full Story: Inside the science of how dogs think – CNN.com

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