I’m sharing this great article and video from
Smithsonian Magazine. Enjoy it!
The Science
Behind Dogs' Goofy Greetings
Why do dogs go nuts when their owners get home? The answers lie
in their DNA and brains
(patchattack/Flickr CC BY-SA 2.0)
SMITHSONIAN.COM
AUGUST 3, 2015
AUGUST 3, 2015
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After returning home from a
trip, work or even a short walk to take out the garbage, dog owners are
routinely greeted with copious amounts of drool and tail wagging. But why? As
George Dvorsky explains
over at io9,
the answer is in dogs' brains — and even their DNA.
Some of dogs' enthusiasm
comes down to their wolf ancestry. Wolves often greet each other with face
licking—a way of affirming social bonds and checking out what your buddy caught
on a hunt. That said, wolves are more skeptical of new things, so dog greetings
are much more exaggerated. Some argue that the most social wolves would have
been the ones domesticated by humans 10,000 to 15,000 years ago, explains
Dvorsky.
There's another component
to goofy dog greetings: the brain. Dogs can distinguish human smells from those
of canines and recognize familiar odors, writes Dvorsky in a deep dive that's
well worth checking out. Brain imaging studies also suggest that the sight of
an owner switches on pathways in the brain associated with reward. (The same
thing happens when humans see friends.)
All of those explanations
could certainly be behind the plethora of YouTube videos of dogs going nuts at
the sight of owners returning home:
There’s also some recent
evidence that dogs and humans share a unique bond. When they gaze
into each other’s eyes, their brains secrete the hormone oxytocin. It’s linked
to social bonding in several species, but most notably between human mothers
and babies. Even when raised by humans, wolves do not experience the same
oxytocin rush.
Obviously, all dogs are
different, and greetings definitely vary. Dogs who aren’t used to being
separated from their owner may be more enthusiastic when that long-lost owner
returns (even if it's only been a few minutes). Either way, it’s clear that
dogs can get as much enjoyment out of seeing their human as their human gets
out of seeing them.
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/why-do-dogs-go-nuts-when-reunited-their-owners
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