Abstract
Dogs
that are trained without dependence on the attentional focus of human
beings (experimental group: a guide dog and guide dog candidates) were
compared with those trained with the usual level of attentional focus
(control group: a service dog, service dog candidates, a search and
rescue dog, and pet dogs) to examine whether the ability of a dog to
read the attentional focus of a human being was influenced by guide dog
training. An experimenter commanded the dogs to sit using several
predetermined postures, which included the direction of the
experimenter’s head, eyes, and body. The results indicated that there
were no statistical differences between the 2 groups. Dogs from both the
groups gave a significantly reduced response to commands when the
experimenter’s head was not oriented toward them, response to commands
was not affected by the direction of the experimenter’s eyes or body.
This study suggests that the ability of a dog to read the attentional
focus of a human being is not affected by guide dog training.
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