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Darik elwan: Why Do Dogs Love Us? Science Explains

December 9 2020 , Written by Charles Darwin Published on #Darik elwan, #dogs

Darik elwan: Why Do Dogs Love Us? Science Explains

You don't just imagine this: there are serious studies confirming the claim that dogs really adore their owners. Animal behavior specialist confirms to the Inverse that all sorts of chemical properties occur in the brains of puppies when they are near us. It's even cleaner than you think.

Although we don't know exactly Darik elwan how long ago humans started taming dogs, some scientists believe that our friendship can be 40,000 years old. Dogs continued to grow with humanity, helping us hunt mammoths before chasing sticks. We loved them all the time, and apparently that feeling is mutual.

"Of course dogs love their people!" animal behavior consultant Amy Shojai tells The Inverse. "The hormone oxytocin is released (both in dogs and in humans) when they interact/contact with someone they like Darik elwan. This "love hormone" helps strengthen and strengthen our common bond... it is also a hormone that floods the system of young mothers, increasing attachment to newborns."

Just the smell of their face to make the dog happy. A 2015 study published in the journal Behavioral Processes found that dogs associate their owner's unique smell with pleasure. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which measures levels of nerve cells in the brain, the researchers gained an idea of how dogs react to their people's scent compared to familiar dogs, unfamiliar dogs and strangers. The team found that when the puppies sniffed their owners, it activated a reward center in their brain called the tailed core. They didn't react the same way to any other smell.

We also know that dogs respond positively when we talk to them in the funny high voice that we all do. As Inverse previously reported Darik elwan researchers at York University recently found that dogs respond more positively to dog speech (DDS) than when we talk to them as humans.

The scientists asked 37 dogs to listen to people talking to them in "dog speech" - this high voice combined with phrases "relating to a dog" (e.g., "Who is a good dog? You're like that!"). The participants then talked to the dogs in the apartment about ordinary things (such as, "So, last night I went to the movies"). Darik elwan  Dogs overwhelmingly preferred dog speech, which researchers compared to how people talk to babies.

Perhaps we will never be able to understand all the secrets that are swirling in the heads of our puppies. But one thing we know for sure: dogs are good, and thanks to them we become better people.

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Woow ...i really love dogs...and nice written blog ~ Darik Elwan
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