Recent research suggests that some human-like social skills evolved in dogs (Canis familiaris) during domestication as an incidental by-product of selection for “tame” forms of behavior. It is still possible, however, that the social skills of certain dog breeds came under direct selection that led to further increases in social problem solving ability. To test this hypothesis, different breeds of domestic dogs were compared for their ability to use various human communicative behaviors to find hidden food. We found that even primitive breeds with little human contact were able to use communicative cues. Further, “working” dogs (shepherds and huskies: thought to be bred intentionally to respond to human cooperative communicative signals) were more skilled at using gestural cues than were non-working breeds (basenji and toy poodles: not thought to have been bred for their cooperative-communicative ability). This difference in performance existed regardless of whether the working breeds were more or less genetically wolf-like. These results suggest that subsequent to initial domesticating selection giving rise to cue-following skills, additional selection on communicative abilities in certain breeds has produced substantive differences in those breeds’ abilities to follow cues.
2025. Social modulation of dogs' behavioural synchronization with humans: effect of number of people and owner's presence. Animal Behaviour 219 ► pp. 123019 ff.
Pongrácz, Péter & Petra Dobos
2025. Behavioural differences and similarities between dog breeds: proposing an ecologically valid approach for canine behavioural research. Biological Reviews 100:1 ► pp. 68 ff.
Ricci-Bonot, Claire, Kimberly Brosche, Paolo Baragli & Christine Nicol
2025. A systematic review on the effect of individual characteristics and management practices on equine cognition. Animal Cognition 28:1
2025. In dogs, social stimuli overshadow nonsocial stimuli and stronger attachment correlates with responses to the latter. Animal Behaviour 221 ► pp. 123099 ff.
Azadian, Amin & Alexandra Protopopova
2024. Exploring breed differences in discrimination, reversal learning, and resistance to extinction in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). Scientific Reports 14:1
McCartney, Josephine M. & David A. Leavens
2024. The Role of Life History and Familiarity in Performance of Working and Non-Working Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) in a Point-Following Task. Animals 14:4 ► pp. 573 ff.
Mellor, Nerys, Sebastian McBride, Emma Stoker & Sarah Dalesman
2024. Impact of Training Discipline and Experience on Inhibitory Control and Cognitive Performance in Pet Dogs. Animals 14:3 ► pp. 428 ff.
Naughton, Violetta, Teresa Grzelak & Patrick J. Naughton
2024. Association Between Household Location (Urban versus Rural) and Fundamental Care Provided to Domestic Dogs (Canis Familiaris) in Northern Ireland. In Nutrition and Metabolism of Dogs and Cats [Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 1446], ► pp. 217 ff.
Benson-Amram, Sarah, Hannah J. Griebling & Christina M. Sluka
2023. The current state of carnivore cognition. Animal Cognition 26:1 ► pp. 37 ff.
2023. Behavioural synchronization and social referencing of dogs and humans: walking in dyad vs in group. Animal Cognition 26:3 ► pp. 1021 ff.
McCreary, Maeve K., Sara V. R. Jones & Valerie A. Kuhlmeier
2023. Following the human point: Research with nonhuman animals since Povinelli, Nelson, and Boysen (1990). Learning & Behavior 51:1 ► pp. 34 ff.
Prato-Previde, Emanuela, Giulia Pedretti, Elena Terruzzi & Paola Valsecchi
2023. When the owner does not know: comparing puppies and adult dogs’ showing behavior. Animal Cognition 26:3 ► pp. 985 ff.
Ferrans, Morgan, Hannah Salomons & Brian Hare
2022. From mind to genome: the effect of domestication on dog cognition and genetics. In Genetics and the Behavior of Domestic Animals, ► pp. 253 ff.
Junttila, Saara, Anna Valros, Katariina Mäki, Heli Väätäjä, Elisa Reunanen & Katriina Tiira
2022. Breed differences in social cognition, inhibitory control, and spatial problem-solving ability in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). Scientific Reports 12:1
2022. Identification of genes associated with human-canine communication in canine evolution. Scientific Reports 12:1
Wells, Deborah L.
2022. Factors influencing the expression of behavior in the domestic dog. In Genetics and the Behavior of Domestic Animals, ► pp. 229 ff.
Bognár, Zsófia, Dóra Szabó, Alexandra Deés & Enikő Kubinyi
2021. Shorter headed dogs, visually cooperative breeds, younger and playful dogs form eye contact faster with an unfamiliar human. Scientific Reports 11:1
Hare, Brian & Morgan Ferrans
2021. Is cognition the secret to working dog success?. Animal Cognition 24:2 ► pp. 231 ff.
Rodriguez, Kerri E., Harold Herzog & Nancy R. Gee
2021. Variability in Human-Animal Interaction Research. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 7
Sumridge, Molly H., Malini Suchak & Christy L. Hoffman
2021. Owner-Reported Attachment and Behavior Characteristics of New Guinea Singing Dogs Living as Companion Animals. Anthrozoös 34:3 ► pp. 375 ff.
Takagi, Saho
2021. Developments in Research on Cat Cognition and Personality. In Comparative Cognition, ► pp. 287 ff.
Boschin, Francesco, Federico Bernardini, Elena Pilli, Stefania Vai, Clément Zanolli, Antonio Tagliacozzo, Rosario Fico, Mariaelena Fedi, Julien Corny, Diego Dreossi, Martina Lari, Alessandra Modi, Chiara Vergata, Claudio Tuniz, Adriana Moroni, Paolo Boscato, David Caramelli & Annamaria Ronchitelli
2020. The first evidence for Late Pleistocene dogs in Italy. Scientific Reports 10:1
Czeibert, Kálmán, Andrea Sommese, Örs Petneházy, Tibor Csörgő & Enikő Kubinyi
2020. Digital Endocasting in Comparative Canine Brain Morphology. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 7
Gnanadesikan, Gitanjali E, Brian Hare, Noah Snyder-Mackler, Josep Call, Juliane Kaminski, Ádám Miklósi & Evan L MacLean
2020. Breed Differences in Dog Cognition Associated with Brain-Expressed Genes and Neurological Functions. Integrative and Comparative Biology 60:4 ► pp. 976 ff.
Gnanadesikan, Gitanjali E., Brian Hare, Noah Snyder-Mackler & Evan L. MacLean
2020. Estimating the heritability of cognitive traits across dog breeds reveals highly heritable inhibitory control and communication factors. Animal Cognition 23:5 ► pp. 953 ff.
Huber, Ludwig, Kaja Salobir, Roger Mundry & Giulia Cimarelli
2020. Selective overimitation in dogs. Learning & Behavior 48:1 ► pp. 113 ff.
Lazarowski, Lucia, Andie Thompkins, Sarah Krichbaum, L. Paul Waggoner, Gopikrishna Deshpande & Jeffrey S. Katz
2020. Comparing pet and detection dogs (Canis familiaris) on two aspects of social cognition. Learning & Behavior 48:4 ► pp. 432 ff.
2019. Effects of breed group and development on dogs’ willingness to follow a human misleading advice. Animal Cognition 22:5 ► pp. 757 ff.
Horschler, Daniel J., Brian Hare, Josep Call, Juliane Kaminski, Ádám Miklósi & Evan L. MacLean
2019. Absolute brain size predicts dog breed differences in executive function. Animal Cognition 22:2 ► pp. 187 ff.
Lazarowski, Lucia, Bart Rogers, L. Paul Waggoner & Jeffrey S. Katz
2019. When the nose knows: ontogenetic changes in detection dogs' (Canis familiaris) responsiveness to social and olfactory cues. Animal Behaviour 153 ► pp. 61 ff.
2019. Wolf-like or dog-like? A comparison of gazing behaviour across three dog breeds tested in their familiar environments. Royal Society Open Science 6:9 ► pp. 190946 ff.
Mallikarjun, Amritha, Emily Shroads & Rochelle S. Newman
2019. The cocktail party effect in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). Animal Cognition 22:3 ► pp. 423 ff.
Oliva, Jessica Lee, Manuel Mengoli, Tiago Mendonça, Alessandro Cozzi, Patrick Pageat, Camille Chabaud, Eva Teruel, Céline Lafont-Lecuelle & Cécile Bienboire-Frosini
2019. Working Smarter Not Harder: Oxytocin Increases Domestic Dogs’ (Canis familiaris) Accuracy, but Not Attempts, on an Object Choice Task. Frontiers in Psychology 10
2019. A wolfdog point of view on the impossible task paradigm. Animal Cognition 22:6 ► pp. 1073 ff.
Bognár, Zsófia, Ivaylo B. Iotchev & Enikő Kubinyi
2018. Sex, skull length, breed, and age predict how dogs look at faces of humans and conspecifics. Animal Cognition 21:4 ► pp. 447 ff.
McGetrick, Jim & Friederike Range
2018. Inequity aversion in dogs: a review. Learning & Behavior 46:4 ► pp. 479 ff.
Sundman, Ann-Sofie, Mia E. Persson, Anna Grozelier, Lise-Lotte Halldén, Per Jensen & Lina S.V. Roth
2018. Understanding of human referential gestures is not correlated to human-directed social behaviour in Labrador retrievers and German shepherd dogs. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 201 ► pp. 46 ff.
Thomas, James & Simon Kirby
2018. Self domestication and the evolution of language. Biology & Philosophy 33:1-2
Broadway, Megan S., Mystera M. Samuelson, Jennie L. Christopher, Stephanie E. Jett & Heidi Lyn
2017. Does size really matter? Investigating cognitive differences in spatial memory ability based on size in domestic dogs. Behavioural Processes 138 ► pp. 7 ff.
Hare, Brian
2017. Survival of the Friendliest:Homo sapiensEvolved via Selection for Prosociality. Annual Review of Psychology 68:1 ► pp. 155 ff.
Hare, Brian
2018. Domestication experiments reveal developmental link between friendliness and cognition. Journal of Bioeconomics 20:1 ► pp. 159 ff.
Johnston, Angie M., Courtney Turrin, Lyn Watson, Alyssa M. Arre & Laurie R. Santos
2017. Uncovering the origins of dog–human eye contact: dingoes establish eye contact more than wolves, but less than dogs. Animal Behaviour 133 ► pp. 123 ff.
2016. Dog Breed Differences in Visual Communication with Humans. PLOS ONE 11:10 ► pp. e0164760 ff.
Kovács, Krisztina, Anna Kis, Ákos Pogány, Dóra Koller & József Topál
2016. Differential effects of oxytocin on social sensitivity in two distinct breeds of dogs (Canis familiaris). Psychoneuroendocrinology 74 ► pp. 212 ff.
2016. The effect of training and breed group on problem-solving behaviours in dogs. Animal Cognition 19:3 ► pp. 571 ff.
Polgár, Zita, Mari Kinnunen, Dóra Újváry, Ádám Miklósi, Márta Gácsi & Jan S Suchodolski
2016. A Test of Canine Olfactory Capacity: Comparing Various Dog Breeds and Wolves in a Natural Detection Task. PLOS ONE 11:5 ► pp. e0154087 ff.
Lazarowski, Lucia & David C. Dorman
2015. A comparison of pet and purpose-bred research dog (Canis familiaris) performance on human-guided object-choice tasks. Behavioural Processes 110 ► pp. 60 ff.
Moore, Richard, Bettina Mueller, Juliane Kaminski & Michael Tomasello
2015. Two‐year‐old children but not domestic dogs understand communicative intentions without language, gestures, or gaze. Developmental Science 18:2 ► pp. 232 ff.
Oliva, J. L., J.-L. Rault, B. Appleton & A. Lill
2015. Oxytocin enhances the appropriate use of human social cues by the domestic dog (Canis familiaris) in an object choice task. Animal Cognition 18:3 ► pp. 767 ff.
Persson, M. E., L. S. V. Roth, M. Johnsson, D. Wright & P. Jensen
2015. Human‐directed social behaviour in dogs shows significant heritability. Genes, Brain and Behavior 14:4 ► pp. 337 ff.
Robinson, Charlotte, Clara Mancini, Janet van der Linden, Claire Guest, Lydia Swanson, Helen Marsden, Jose Valencia & Brendan Aengenheister
2015. Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing, ► pp. 337 ff.
Törnqvist, Heini, Sanni Somppi, Aija Koskela, Christina M. Krause, Outi Vainio & Miiamaaria V. Kujala
2015. Comparison of dogs and humans in visual scanning of social interaction. Royal Society Open Science 2:9 ► pp. 150341 ff.
Hunt, Melissa G. & Rachel R. Chizkov
2014. Are Therapy Dogs Like Xanax? Does Animal-Assisted Therapy Impact Processes Relevant to Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy?. Anthrozoös 27:3 ► pp. 457 ff.
Mehrkam, Lindsay R. & Clive D.L. Wynne
2014. Behavioral differences among breeds of domestic dogs (Canis lupus familiaris): Current status of the science. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 155 ► pp. 12 ff.
Somppi, Sanni, Heini Törnqvist, Laura Hänninen, Christina M. Krause & Outi Vainio
2014. How dogs scan familiar and inverted faces: an eye movement study. Animal Cognition 17:3 ► pp. 793 ff.
Udell, Monique A.R., Margaret Ewald, Nicole R. Dorey & Clive D.L. Wynne
2014. Exploring breed differences in dogs (Canis familiaris): does exaggeration or inhibition of predatory response predict performance on human-guided tasks?. Animal Behaviour 89 ► pp. 99 ff.
Bensky, Miles K., Samuel D. Gosling & David L. Sinn
2013. The World from a Dog’s Point of View [Advances in the Study of Behavior, 45], ► pp. 209 ff.
Buttelmann, David & Michael Tomasello
2013. Can domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) use referential emotional expressions to locate hidden food?. Animal Cognition 16:1 ► pp. 137 ff.
Kaminski, Juliane & Marie Nitzschner
2013. Do dogs get the point? A review of dog–human communication ability. Learning and Motivation 44:4 ► pp. 294 ff.
Merola, I., S. Marshall-Pescini, B. D’Aniello & E. Prato-Previde
2013. Social referencing: Water rescue trained dogs are less affected than pet dogs by the stranger's message. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 147:1-2 ► pp. 132 ff.
Miklósi, Ádám & József Topál
2013. What does it take to become ‘best friends’? Evolutionary changes in canine social competence. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 17:6 ► pp. 287 ff.
Pongrácz, Péter, Márta Gácsi, Dorottya Hegedüs, András Péter & Ádám Miklósi
2013. Test sensitivity is important for detecting variability in pointing comprehension in canines. Animal Cognition 16:5 ► pp. 721 ff.
Barrera, Gabriela, Adriana Jakovcevic, Alba Mustaca & Mariana Bentosela
2012. Learning interspecific communicative responses in Pampas foxes (Lycalopex gymnocercus). Behavioural Processes 89:1 ► pp. 44 ff.
Hare, Brian, Victoria Wobber & Richard Wrangham
2012. The self-domestication hypothesis: evolution of bonobo psychology is due to selection against aggression. Animal Behaviour 83:3 ► pp. 573 ff.
Mulcahy, Nicholas J. & Vernon Hedge
2012. Are great apes tested with an abject object-choice task?. Animal Behaviour 83:2 ► pp. 313 ff.
2011. Human-directed gazing behaviour in puppies and adult dogs, Canis lupus familiaris. Animal Behaviour 82:5 ► pp. 1043 ff.
Silva, Karine & Liliana de Sousa
2011.
‘
Canis empathicus
’? A proposal on dogs' capacity to empathize with humans
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Helton, William S.
2010. Does perceived trainability of dog (Canis lupus familiaris) breeds reflect differences in learning or differences in physical ability?. Behavioural Processes 83:3 ► pp. 315 ff.
Helton, William S. & Nicole D. Helton
2010. Physical size matters in the domestic dog's (Canis lupus familiaris) ability to use human pointing cues. Behavioural Processes 85:1 ► pp. 77 ff.
Jakovcevic, Adriana, Angel M. Elgier, Alba E. Mustaca & Mariana Bentosela
2010. Breed differences in dogs’ (Canis familiaris) gaze to the human face. Behavioural Processes 84:2 ► pp. 602 ff.
Tomasello, Michael & Juliane Kaminski
2009. Like Infant, Like Dog. Science 325:5945 ► pp. 1213 ff.
[no author supplied]
2024. Social Behavior and Breed Differences. In Breed Differences in Dog Behavior, ► pp. 165 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 16 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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