Dogs can read emotion in human faces

Dogs are the only animals that can read emotion in faces much like humans, cementing their position as man's best friend, claim scientists.

  • Dogs have a sense of right and wrong
  • Dogs 'may be able to read their owner's minds'
  • Dogs display aspects of human intelligence
  • Research findings suggest that, like an understanding best friend, they can see at a glance if we are happy, sad, pleased or angry.

    When humans look at a new face their eyes tend to wander left, falling on the right hand side of the person's face first.

    This "left gaze bias" only occurs when we encounter faces and does not apply any other time, such as when inspecting animals or inanimate objects.

    A possible reason for the tendency is that the right side of the human face is better at expressing emotional state.

    Researchers at the University of Lincoln have now shown that pet dogs also exhibit "left gaze bias", but only when looking at human faces. No other animal has been known to display this behaviour before.

    A team led by Dr Kun Guo showed 17 dogs images of human, dog and monkey faces as well as inanimate objects.

    Film of the dogs' eye and head movement revealed a strong left gaze bias when the animals were presented with human faces. But this did not occur when they were shown other images, including those of dogs.

    "Guo suggests that over thousands of generations of association with humans, dogs may have evolved the left gaze bias as a way to gauge our emotions," New Scientist magazine reported.

    "Recent studies show that the right side of our faces can express emotions more accurately and more intensely than the left, including anger. If true, then it makes sense for dogs - and humans - to inspect the right hand side of a face first."

    Surprisingly, when the dogs in the study were shown an upside-down human face, they still looked left. In contrast, humans lose their left gaze bias altogether when shown an inverted face.

    This may be because the right side of a dog's brain, which processes information from the left visual field, is better adapted to interpreting human facial emotion than the left side, the scientists believe.

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