Female dogs are ‘more intelligent’ than male canines
April 30th, 2011 - 3:02 pm ICT by ANILondon, Apr 30 (ANI): A study has found that female canines are more intelligent than males, and that in at least once task the females have the edge.
Scientists studied a range of common household dogs of both sexes to see whether they understood a simple cognition task that humans understand by the age of one.
The task involved the realisation that objects do not change shape simply because they disappear from view.
They set up a wooden board and used a system involving blue tennis balls and four different scenarios.
In the study, 25 female and 25 male dogs were each firstly shown either a small or large ball emerging and then reappearing.
The animals were then shown a small or large ball disappearing and being replaced by the opposite of what had been taken away.
Scientists then measured the dogs’ reactions to something that they would consider “impossible” by measuring how long they stared at the new ball.
“If something unexpected or, say, impossible is to happen, children and animals will look longer at the event,” the Daily Mail quoted Professor Corsin Muller, from the University of Vienna, who conducted the experiment as telling LiveScience.
“When you start looking, you get some very interesting and instructive results,” Muller said.
When Muller and his team first analysed the results they found that all the dogs looked at the ball for longer.
But when they broke down the results they discovered that the male dogs had not noticed anything odd at all - yet the females had stared at the unexpected object for up to 30 seconds.
This was more than three times the time they spent when the ball did not change.
The scientist explained there are three possible explanations for the phenomenon.
The first is that evolution may have caused differences in the brains of the animals, while another is that females duties as child bearers meant their brains show greater nurturing skills.
However Muller believes that neither of these explanations is relevant in dogs and suspects that differences in the brain are a side effect of other biological differences.
“It is most likely this is just a by-product of sex hormones working on the brain, without necessarily having a function,” Muller stated.
Although this experiment gave female dogs the cognitive edge, Muller said it’s likely that future findings of sex differences would even the intelligence scale. (ANI)
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Tags: both sexes, brains, daily mail, evolution, explanations, female dogs, females, firstly, household dogs, livescience, male dogs, phenomenon, scenarios, scientist, scientists, shape, tennis balls, three times, unexpected object, university of vienna