2023年12月24日发(作者:亲朋打旋)
四级题what is your dog thinking
Your companion dog is asleep next to you, but is she
dreaming about you? Does she feel guilty about stealing
your steak off the kitchen counter for dinner? What was she
trying to say with that annoying bark? Does she like
watching TV?
After decades of rearch, neuroscientists have begun
to answer the questions, giving us access to the once-cret inner lives of our canine companions and even
translating their barks and waggles so humans can
understand them.
At the forefront of this effort is behaviourist Stanley
Coren of the University of British Columbia, who has ud
decades of rearch to explore the psychological
motivations behind dogs' everyday behavior, as well as what
science has to say about their barking, thoughts and
dreams.
Do dogs have the same emotions as humans?
Dogs have the same brain structure that produces
emotions as humans. They share the same hormones and
undergo the same chemical changes as humans in their
emotional state. Dogs even have the hormone oxytocin, which
in humans is associated with love and affection. So it
ems reasonable to think that dogs have emotions similar
to ours. However, it is important not to overdo it: a dog's
mind is roughly equivalent to that of a 2 to 2 1/2 year old
human. A child of an age obviously has emotions, but not
all possible emotions, as many appear in later adulthood.
Dogs go through developmental stages more quickly than
humans, reaching their full emotional range between four
and six months of age. Just like human toddlers, dogs have
basic emotions: joy, fear, anger, disgust, excitement,
satisfaction, pain, and even love. However, dogs do not and
do not develop more complex emotions such as guilt, pride,
contempt and shame.
You may argue that your dog has shown evidence of
guilt. In the usual scenario, you come home, your dog
starts squinting around and acting uncomfortable, and you
find it in smelly brown diment on the kitchen floor. It
is natural to conclude that the dog's be shows guilt for
its transgressions. However, this is just the more basic
emotion of fear. Dogs have learned that bad things will
happen to them when you show up and their feces are visible
on the floor. What you e is the dog's fear of punishment;
He will never feel guilty. And he'll never be ashamed, so
feel free to dress him up in that ridiculous party costume.
Why do dogs prefer HDTVS
Most dogs have little interest in regular television
ts becau of their visual ability. In its simplest form,
the movement en on a TV screen is simply the pattern of
light changes on the retina in our eyes. The average person
can't e any flicker more than 55 cycles per cond (55
Hz). But beagles flicker at 75 Hz, about 50 percent faster
than humans, suggesting that dogs perceive motion better
than humans.
The television image flashes at about 60 Hz. Since this
is higher than a human's 55 Hz flicker resolution
capability, the images are continuous to us and can be
blended together smoothly.
Since dogs can par flickers at 75 Hz, the image on
the TV screen may em less realistic and less noteworthy.
However, becau high-resolution digital screens refresh at
a much higher rate, there are more and more reports of dogs
who are very interested in new technology HDTV when nature
programming includes images of animals moving.
Do dogs dream?
Many people think dogs have dreams. Most dog owners
have noticed that at different times during sleep, some
dogs may tremble, twitch a leg, or even growl or snap sleep
to create phanomes that give the impression they are
dreaming about something. On a structural level, the dog
brain is similar to the human brain. Moreover, during
sleep, dogs' brain wave patterns are similar to tho of
humans, and they show the same phas of electrical
activity obrved in humans -- all consistent with the idea
that dogs are dreaming.
In fact, it would be surprising if dogs didn't dream,
since recent evidence suggests that animals are simpler and
less intelligent than dogs and em to do so. Matthew
Wilson and Kenway Louie, neuroscientists at THE
Massachutts Institute of Technology, have evidence that
the brains of sleeping mice suggest dreaming in an
irresistible way. Most of your dreams at night relate to
the activities you were doing that day. So do rats, it
ems. So a rat that runs a maze during the day might dream
at night.
From studying electrical recordings of the rat
hippocampus (a brain region associated with memory
formation and storage) when the rats were awake and
learning mazes, Wilson and Louie found that some electrical
patterns were very specific and recognizable, depending on
what the rats were doing. Later, when the mice were asleep
and their brain waves indicated they had entered the stage
where humans typically dream, the same electrical
patterns appeared. The patterns were so clear and specific
that the rearchers were able to tell where the rat would
be in the maze if it were awake, and whether it was moving
or stationary.
Since dog brains are more complex than mou brains and
show the same electrical quences, it is reasonable to
assume that dogs also dream. There is also evidence that
they dream of common dog activities. The human brain stem
contains a special structure, called the pons, that
prevents us from achieving our dreams. When scientists
removed or inactivated the same part of the dog's brain,
they obrved the dogs start moving around, even though
electrical recordings of the dogs' brains showed they were
still sleeping fast. It is only when the brain enters the
sleep pha associated with dreaming that the animals begin
to move. In the dream, the dogs actually began to perform
the actions they had performed in the dream. For example, a
dreaming pointer might immediately start a arch game, a
sleeping Springer might scour an imaginary bird, and a
dreaming Doberman might choo to fight a dream thief.
It's a strange fact that puppies have more dreams than
big dogs. A dog as small as a toy poodle may dream every 10
minutes, while a large dog such as a mastiff or Great Dane
may have about an hour between dreams. Big dogs, on the
other hand, have dreams that last longer.
Can dogs smile?
In most people's minds, the equivalent of a dog's smile
is when he wags his tail. But there is actually a canine
facial expression that is clo to what we call a smile in
humans. In this expression, the slightly open jaw reveals
the dog's tongue slapping against his front teeth. Usually,
the eyes take on the shape of teardrops at the same time,
as if being pulled slightly upwards at the outer corners.
This is a casual expression that is usually en when dogs
are relaxing, playing or interacting socially, especially
with humans. Once any anxiety or stress is introduced, the
dog's mouth will clo and you will never e the tongue
again.
Dogs can also laugh, and they usually do so while
playing. Dog laughter begins with a dog smile, but also
includes a sound much like panting. Patricia Simonet, an
animal behaviorist at Sierra Nevada College in Lake Tahoe,
recorded the sounds a few years ago as dogs played. When
analyzing the recordings, she found that they covered a
wider range of frequencies than normal dog panting. In one
experiment, Simonet noticed that puppies felt happy when
they heard recordings of the sounds. In another ca, she
was able to demonstrate that tho same sounds helped calm
dogs in animal shelters.
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