|
Home : Papers & Abstracts :
Unexplained Powers of Animals :
Testing a Return-Anticipating Dog, Kane
Abstract: Many dog owners claim that their animals know
when a member of the household is coming home, typically showing
their anticipation by waiting at a door or window. In previous
trials with a dog called Jaytee, recorded on videotape, it was found
that he anticipated his owner's arrival more than ten minutes in
advance, even when she was returning in unfamiliar vehicles such as
taxis, when the people at home did not know when to expect her, and
when she set off at randomly-selected times. This paper describes
the results of a pre-planned series of ten videotaped trials with a
dog called Kane, a Rhodesian ridgeback, who was said to wait by a
window while his owner was on the way home. The window-area was
filmed continuously while the dog's owner went to places more than 8
km away and came home at a variety of non-routine times, some of
which were selected at random and communicated to her by a telephone
pager. The time-coded videotapes were scored blind by a third party.
In nine out of ten trials Kane spent most time at the window when
his owner was on the way home. On average he was at the window 26
percent of the time while she was returning, and only one percent of
the time throughout the rest of her absence. This difference was
highly significant statistically. Possible explanations for this
behavior are discussed.
®2000 Intemational Society for Anthrozoology
The full text article is available for download
in the the following formats:
|