Your pet dog’s brain scans faces like humans do

Update: 2015-08-06 22:45 GMT
Like humans, dogs too have a specialised area in the brain that process faces to give them social cues and make them highly trustworthy social animals, new research has revealed.

The findings provide the first evidence for a face-selective region in the temporal cortex of dogs.
“The results show that dogs have an innate way to process faces in their brains, a quality that has previously been well-documented in humans and other primates,” explained Gregory Berns, neuroscientist at Emory University and the senior author of the study.

This may help explain dogs’ extreme sensitivity to human social cues.

For the study, the researchers focused on how dogs respond to faces versus everyday objects.
The study involved dogs viewing both static images and video images on a screen while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging.

The dogs had to undergo training to learn to pay attention to the screen. A region in dogs’ temporal lobe responded significantly more to movies of human faces than to movies of everyday objects.
This same region responded similarly to still images of human faces and dog faces than to images of everyday objects.

“If the dogs’ response to faces was learned by associating a human face with food  then you would expect to see a response in the reward system of their brains, but that was not the case,” Berns noted.

“We can predict what parts of your brain are going to be activated when you’re looking at faces. 
“This is incredibly reliable amongst people,” noted Daniel Dilks, assistant professor of psychology. 

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