https://youtu.be/3EkOKqZ57LA
DCG
https://youtu.be/3EkOKqZ57LA
DCG
Posted in dogs, Funnies, God's creation
This happened in Owasso, Oklahoma in Tulsa County. A camel on the run!
The police captured him and the creature was returned to his owner. Bet the camel enjoyed his brief jaunt!
DCG
https://youtu.be/2bnzTqx2P2g
DCG
Posted in dogs, God's creation
No wonder dog is man’s best friend.
A new study found that puppies are born with the innate ability to understand human communications or “social cognition”. The communications include humans’ gestures, speech, and facial expressions.
Emily E. Bray, et al., write in Current Biology, June 3, 2021:
Human cognition is believed to be unique in part because of early-emerging social skills for cooperative communication. Comparative studies show that at 2.5 years old, children reason about the physical world similarly to other great apes, yet already possess cognitive skills for cooperative communication far exceeding those in our closest primate relatives.
A growing body of research indicates that domestic dogs exhibit functional similarities to human children in their sensitivity to cooperative-communicative acts. From early in development, dogs flexibly respond to diverse forms of cooperative gestures.
Like human children, dogs are sensitive to ostensive signals marking gestures as communicative, as well as contextual factors needed for inferences about these communicative acts.
However, key questions about potential biological bases for these abilities remain untested. To investigate their developmental and genetic origins, we tested 375 8-week-old dog puppies on a battery of social-cognitive measures. We hypothesized that if dogs’ skills for cooperating with humans are biologically prepared, then they should emerge robustly in early development, not require extensive socialization or learning, and exhibit heritable variation. Puppies were highly skillful at using diverse human gestures, and we found no evidence that their performance required learning. Critically, over 40% of the variation in dogs’ point-following abilities and attention to human faces was attributable to genetic factors. Our results suggest that these social skills in dogs emerge early in development and are under strong genetic control. […]
Our findings show that, from early in development, puppies are highly sensitive and receptive to diverse communicative signals from humans, including gestures and speech, and that variation in these traits is under strong genetic control. Our study design also controls for several alternative explanations. First, subjects were tested at ∼8 weeks, when they were still living with their littermates and eating, sleeping, and spending most of their time with conspecifics rather than humans. Despite their limited experience with humans, puppies were highly skilled at following human gestures and motivated to attend to and interact with humans. Second, our sample size of 375 puppies permitted a powerful analysis of potential learning effects during gesture-following tasks. These analyses confirmed that puppies were skillful from the very first test trial, and that their performance did not improve across trials.
The researchers maintain that puppies’ ability to understand human communications is “a byproduct of selection for tamability, a phenotype believed to have been targeted during dog domestication.”
~E
Posted in dogs, God's creation
Cat owners know that their fur-babies love to sit in bags, baskets, and boxes.
But a new study found that cats would sit even in “boxes” that are optical illusions!
Emma Young reports for the British Psychological Society’s Research Digest, May 24, 2021, that a new study by Gabriella E. Smith at City University of New York and colleagues, published in Applied Animal Behaviour Science, found that cats treated an illusory square as a real square.
Of the 500 pet cats and owners who signed up to take part, 30 completed all the trials. The owners were not told the purpose of the experiment.
Every day for six days, each owner put their cat out of the room while they taped a pair of stimuli to the floor. The researchers instructed them each day on which two of three stimuli to use:
The owner then put on sunglasses (so their cat couldn’t use the owner’s gaze as a cue to what to do), brought the cat into the room, and started videoing. If, within five minutes, their cat sat or stood within either of the shapes, the trial ended. Either way, after five minutes, they submitted the result.
Of those 30 cats who completed all the trials:
This suggests that cats treat the illusory Kanizsa squares just like real ones.
~E
We have a two bird stories this morning.
(1) A kind man nurses a baby hummingbird:
(2) A rescue cardinal chirps “goodbye” to woman:
~E
Some of this intuitive, but I didn’t know about what other sleeping positions mean.
~E
Posted in cats, God's creation
Meet Richard Scott William Hutchinson who was born in June 2020. According to the Daily Mail, Richard weighed less than one pound (11.9 ounces) and was born at 21 weeks. He was so small he could fit in the palm of a hand.
The parents were told that baby Richard had no chance of survival.
Fast forward to June 5, 2021: Baby Richard just celebrated his first birthday!
Richard is now officially recognized by Guinness World Records as the world’s most premature baby to survive after birth, having been born 131 days premature.
During Richard’s first year of life, his parents Beth and Rick had many struggles to navigate, especially with the pandemic. From the the Daily Mail article:
“Rick and Beth traveled one hour every day from their home in Somerset, Wisconsin, to Minneapolis to visit their son.
‘The first month they weren’t even sure he was going to make it,’ Beth told Guinness. It was really hard. You know in the back of your mind that his odds weren’t great.’
Richard slowly gained strength every day and, in December 2020, his parents were told he could go home after six months spent in the NICU.
He is still on oxygen, is monitored with a pulse oximeter machine 24/7 and still requires some meals through a feeding tube, but he is making progress. ‘We are working on getting him off all of them, but it takes time. He has come a long way and is doing amazing,’ Beth said.
‘He is a very happy baby. Always has a smile on the adorable little face of his. His bright blue eyes and smile get me every time.”
Read this family’s whole story here.
So glad Baby Richard beat the odds!