Recent behavioral evidence suggests that dogs, like humans and monkeys, are capable of visual face recognition. But do dogs also exhibit specialized cortical face regions similar to humans and monkeys? Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in six dogs trained to remain motionless during scanning without restraint or sedation, we found a region in the canine temporal lobe that responded significantly more to movies of human faces than to movies of everyday objects. Next, using a new stimulus set to investigate face selectivity in this predefined candidate dog face area, we found that this region responded similarly to images of human faces and dog faces, yet significantly more to both human and dog faces than to images of objects. Such face selectivity was not found in dog primary visual cortex. Taken together, these findings: (1) provide the first evidence for a face-selective region in the temporal cortex of dogs, which cannot be explained by simple low-level visual feature extraction; (2) reveal that neural machinery dedicated to face processing is not unique to primates; and (3) may help explain dogs’ exquisite sensitivity to human social cues.
Awake fMRI reveals a specialized region in dog temporal cortex for face processing
Daniel D. Dilks,P. Cook,Samuel K. Weiller,Helen P. Berns,Mark Spivak,G. Berns
Published 2015 in PeerJ
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
PeerJ
- Publication date
2015-08-04
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Psychology
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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