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Dog Yawn Study: Human Yawns 'Contagious' For Canines

 |  By Posted: 05/08/2012 11:40 am Updated: 05/08/2012 11:40 am

Yawn next to your dog, and she may do the same. Though it seems simple, this contagious behavior is actually quite remarkable: Only a few animals do it, and only dogs cross the species barrier. Now a new study finds that dogs yawn even when they only hear the sound of us yawning, the strongest evidence yet that canines may be able to empathize with us.

Besides people and dogs, contagious yawning has been observed in gelada baboons, stump-tail macaques, and chimpanzees. Humans tend to yawn more with friends and acquaintances, suggesting that "catching" someone's yawn may be tied to feelings of empathy. Similarly, some studies have found that dogs tend to yawn more after watching familiar people yawning. But it is unclear whether the canine behavior is linked to empathy as it is in people. One clue might be if even the mere sound of a human yawn elicited yawning in dogs.

To that end, scientists at the University of Porto in Portugal recruited 29 dogs, all of whom had lived for at least 6 months with their owners. To reduce anxiety, the study was performed in familiar rooms in the dogs' homes and in the presence of a known person but with no visual contact with their owners.

The team, led by behavioral biologist Karine Silva, recorded yawning sounds of the dogs' owners and an unfamiliar woman as well as an artificial control sound consisting of a computer-reversed yawn. (To help induce natural yawning, volunteers listened to an audio loop of prerecorded yawns over headphones.) Each dog heard all of the sounds in two sessions, each carried out 7 days apart. During the sessions, the researchers measured the number of elicited yawns in dogs in response to sounds from known and unknown people.

As the team will report in the July issue of Animal Cognition, 12 out of 29 dogs yawned during the experiment. On average, canines yawned five times more often when they heard humans they knew yawning as opposed to control sounds. "These results suggest that dogs have the capacity to empathize with humans," says Silva.

That's not surprising, she says. People first began domesticating dogs at least 15,000 years ago, and since then we've bred them to perform increasingly complex tasks, from hunting to guiding the blind. This close relationship may have fostered cross-species empathy over the millennia.

"This study tells us something new about the mechanisms underlying contagious yawning in dogs," says Evan McLean, a Ph.D. student at Duke University's Canine Cognition Center in Durham, North Carolina, who was not part of the study. "As in humans, dogs can catch this behavior using their ears alone." Still, he notes, the experiments don't tell us much about the nature of empathy in dogs. "Do they think about our emotions and internal states the way we do as humans?"

Ádám Miklósi, an ethologist at the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, agrees. "Using behaviors as indicators will only show some similarity in behavior," he says, "but it will never tell us whether canine empathy, whatever this is, matches human empathy." Previous work has shown, for example, that when dogs look guilty, they may not actually be feeling guilty. "Dogs can simulate very well different forms of social interest that could mislead people to think they are controlled by the same mental processes," says Miklósi, "but they may not always understand the complexity of human behavior."

ScienceNOW, the daily online news service of the journal Science

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Milash
My microbio is fabulous
21 minutes ago ( 2:35 PM)
I yawned after reading this headline.
12:10 AM on 11/20/2012
Nonverbal Communication Analysis # 2196:
Cross Species Body Language
Contagious Yawning of Dogs Mirroring Humans
An Indicator of What Dog Lovers Already Knew -
Canine Empathy ....

http://www.bodylanguagesuccess.com/2012/11/nonverbal-communication-analysis-2196.html
05:59 PM on 06/18/2012
My dog's yawns get me every time. Even my cat joins in when he's paying attention. It's fascinating how human behavior studies discover all kinds of universal behaviors. I wonder what other animals these findings could apply to. http://questforeffectiveliving.com
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
06:10 AM on 05/11/2012
Dogs are not the only species that have crossed the species barrier. Another species is Homo sapiens. I know that my dog's yawns were contagious to me.
09:42 AM on 05/10/2012
Dog yawning can be an appeasement sign, a displacement activity (when the dog is stressed), a sign of comfort or the dog is just tired. How does the study differentiate these from 'empathy yawning'? That remains unclear...
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commento
New Year, New Hopes
06:10 AM on 05/10/2012
Just a case of, dog see, dog do.
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manapotion
Crazy cat lady in training
10:55 PM on 05/09/2012
Our pup gives kisses too...We always gave him exagerated kisses on his head when he was little. No he does it back in his own curious way. Gets right in our face-usually touches his nose to our cheeck/nose/whatever-and does a little huff that sounds just like a cartoon smacking kiss.
He smiles when we get home or if he's in trouble and wants to remind us that he's too cute to be angry at. (There is usually an overturned garbage somewhere in the house if he starts smiling for no reason)
And yes, he yawns whenever we do. But not without sticking his nose in which ever mouth is hanging open.
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pslcitizen
I intend to live forever. So far, so good.
06:49 PM on 05/09/2012
More money spent on studies that are just stupid..
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OuterBanx North12
Now with 33% MORE caffeine!
03:30 PM on 05/09/2012
My dog also passes gas when I do.
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03:20 PM on 05/09/2012
I picked up on this when I was 11 - over 30 years ago; and I assume others have known for some time. Not exactly breaking research.
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ModerateCentrist
Independents think for themselves
02:51 PM on 05/09/2012
My Wolfdog not only yawns when I do, but he also sighs if I do - especially that really big sigh we let out when we're winding down or starting to fall asleep and our breathing slows way down.
My other (regular) dog doesn't do this, so I think it might have something to do with how "tuned in" an animal is to us.
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maxom
Just flew over the coo coo's nest
04:04 PM on 05/09/2012
I'm curious....Wolfdog?....and ''regular'' dog.?....explain please.
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GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
06:39 PM on 05/09/2012
Maybe a wolf-dog hybrid?
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ModerateCentrist
Independents think for themselves
10:32 AM on 05/10/2012
the wolfdog is half wolf, half Shepherd. they used to call them wolf hybrids, but that term is no longer favored because since they are both technically canines, they cannot be hybrids...
persanally, i think they use wolfdog because the name wolf hybrid has a bad rap.

the 'regular' dog is a retriever.
05:37 PM on 05/09/2012
Wolfdog?
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ModerateCentrist
Independents think for themselves
10:39 AM on 05/10/2012
yes. wolf hybrids are now called wolfdogs among the wolf hybrid community because the previous term now has a bad rap.
and because when labeled that way it guarantees they will be euthanized by Animal Control Depts if they get picked up or dropped off by owners.
12:50 PM on 05/09/2012
My Yorkie, Sophie, will smile at me when I smile at her. She will smile on her own when you walk in the room or wake up on the morning - like she's happy to see you. In the past few years...she's started to "laugh" with me. I think it started when something fell from the Kitchen Counter and startled her. I was trying to make sure she was okay and I got goofy and said - Sorry - just a joke!! I clapped my hands together and started an exagerated laugh. She started smiling and was moving her head up and down and making this little sound. It was so funny. Now she does it if I start it first. My Son couldn't believe it when he saw her do it. He said it was one of the funniest things he's ever seen. She is the best companion dog and reads our body language, moods, spelled words and we believe at times our minds. We love her so much!
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mo girl
....divided we fall
01:15 PM on 05/09/2012
Yorkies are awesome! I have two. My male is 5 yrs old and is definetly my best friend. He's very laid back and we call him the cuddler. He knows when I am sick and won't leave my side. My female is 3 and is the clown, she is always doing something to make us laugh.

I have a funny yawn. I make a very unusual noise when I do. I think its because of the tissue in my throat that causes it but my male yawns with the exact same unusual sound! My husband has said, "omg, he yawns just like you do!"
01:29 PM on 05/09/2012
That's so CUTE!!! I wish I had two (or there or four)! I agree with you they are AWESOME!
10:35 AM on 05/09/2012
Cats do that, too. Convinced my cat was part dog...played fetch, came when you called, hated cats, loved dogs. Heck, he even stands between me and any repair person, like he's going to protect me. Have a great photo of my husband laying on the couch and the cat is on the couch right next to him in the exact same position!
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DEBRET
02:23 PM on 05/09/2012
Oh yes. I had a Siamese, an Abyssinian and a Boxer. That kitten Siamese took to my boy Boxer like it was his mommy! "Austen" would nestle into my Boxer "Cody" to sleep and followed him everywhere. Austen wanted nothing to do with the Abyssinian. When I would prepare their food, just as I was about to put their bowl down on the floor, Austen would make this rhytmic yowling sound as if to say "Thank you".
03:58 PM on 05/09/2012
I also have cats that yawn when I do, they also yawn when the dog does :) They are very attached to us and the dog.
10:25 AM on 05/09/2012
In my experience, many dogs are better people than most humans.
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01:38 PM on 05/09/2012
Me too. :-)
04:21 PM on 05/09/2012
agree
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jimdavis11
Protect and promote the middle class.
10:18 AM on 05/09/2012
One of my dogs squeals uh huh or uh uh when I ask certain questions!