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Saturday, February 25, 2017
Your dog has a better memory than a chimpanzee
Any dog owner will tell you how smart they think their dog is.
What we usually think of as smartness in dogs is measured or observed in
their external behaviour. Being able to respond to commands, for
example, or remember the location of a hidden toy.
Scientists have long wondered whether what underlies “smart”
behaviour in animals is cognitive processes – in other words, thinking,
an expression of some kind of intelligence. Researchers started by
studying non-human primates and have since demonstrated remarkable
cognitive abilities in other mammals, including dogs. They have shown
that dogs have significant capacity to remember associations between
commands, situations and behaviour. Recent research even showed that dogs can actually remember specific events, just like humans and other primates can.
In the early 2000s, a series of studies began to show unequivocally
that dogs have sophisticated abstract abilities. For example, they can follow pointing gestures, something that was previously thought to be a uniquely human capacity. A later study showed that dogs could do this even though chimpanzees, often thought of as one of the smartest animals, can’t.
Dogs have also been shown to have numerical abilities, another skill previously thought to exist only in humans. A 2002 study
investigated the ability of 11 pet dogs to count by performing simple
calculations in front of them using treats. The researcher would place a
number of treats behind a screen one by one and then reveal how many
there were in total. But sometimes the experimenter would manipulate the
outcome so that the total of treats revealed at the end wasn’t the same
number the dog had seen placed there. For example 1+1=3 instead of
1+1=2.
The dogs spent significantly longer looking at the outcome of the
manipulated calculations, as if the answer was not what they had been
expecting. This suggested that not only did the dogs anticipate the
results of the calculations, but also that they held representations of
numbers in their memory.
Fetch!Shutterstock
In November 2016, a new study
showed dogs’ memory may be even more sophisticated than this.
Researchers from Hungary demonstrated that dogs have a type of memory
known in psychological jargon as “episodic memory”. This is the ability
to remember specific events from the past rather than just the
relationship between two things (associative memory). This has been previously only be shown to exist in humans and other primates.
Evidence that non-human animals have some form of episodic memory is
difficult to obtain because you can’t ask animals what they remember. So
in the recent study, a group of dogs were trained to repeat an action
demonstrated by a human trainer. For example, if the model jumped in the
air and gave the dog the command “Do it!”, the dog was supposed to
reproduce the same action as observed. And they did.
More than association
Further experiments showed that the dogs remembered the actions even
when they were not expecting to be rewarded for the “imitation”. The
animals were not simply learning to memorise associations between an
action performed by an actor and their behavioural response because they
wanted to be rewarded. This was the first time, as far as we can tell,
that animals other than primates have been shown to remember events.
Exactly how long dogs can remember things for, however, is not clear.
We don’t have evidence that dogs can remember events months or even
days after they have happened, like humans can. One recent study
that compared the memory capabilities of 25 different animals even
suggested that dogs’ short-term memory for information was limited to
just a couple of minutes.
Still, this was much better than the average time for all the animals
in the study, which was just 27 seconds. Chimpanzees had a short-term
memory of just 20 seconds. Compared to most animals, dogs do seem to
have a particular knack for remembering things. So perhaps dog owners
are right to swear by their pets’ intelligence.
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