NEW YORK (AP) — The way Fido wags his tail might reveal more about him than you know. Just ask another dog.
A
few years ago, researchers discovered a subtle difference in how dogs
wag their tails. When a dog sees something positive, such as its owner,
it tends to wags its tail more to its right. The wagging tends to go
left when it sees something negative, like an unfamiliar dominant dog.
Now,
the same Italian researchers report that other dogs pick up on that
difference, and it's reflected in their behavior and even their heart
rates. Experts say the tail-wagging difference appears to be one way
that dogs gauge how other dogs will respond to them.
"It's just
fascinating that dogs pick up on it," said Evan MacLean, co-director of
Duke University's Canine Cognition Center. For humans, he said, "it's a
difficult thing to see."
MacLean was not involved with the study, reported Thursday in the journal Current Biology.
Giorgio
Vallortigara of the University of Trento in Italy, an author of the
study, said Fido is not deliberately sending a message. Instead, the
tail-wagging behavior stems from how different emotional cues activate
different parts of the brain, he said in an email. Read More.
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