5 Ways Your Dog Senses the World Differently from You |
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| Written by Mike Ray | |
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Sight - It was once thought that dogs were "color-blind" – only able to
see shades of black and white with some grey, but scientific studies
have found that's not true. Dogs can see in color – ranging from blues
and greens to greys and crèmes, and of course, black and white. It's
been estimated that humans can distinguish somewhere between 7 and 10
million different colors. (We don't even have names for that many
colors!) But dogs have it all over humans
in detecting motion – that's one reason they can detect a cat up a tree
at a much greater distance than you can! And their night vision is
typically better than ours – dogs have an additional reflective layer
in the eye called the tapetum lucidum, which reflects light back into
the receptor cells of the eye, which not only increases their night
vision, but gives them that spooky appearance of eyes glowing in the
dark. Smell - We can't even come close to our dog's ability to smell things. It's been estimated that a dog's sense of smell is 100,000 times more powerful than a human's. Scientists think that humans have about 40 million olfactory receptors, versus 2 billion for your dog! That's part of the reason dogs make such good trackers, and can trace scents across all sorts of distractions – like across roadways or through dense woods. Dogs also use their sense of smell as a communications tool – when they're running around the park with their nose to the ground, sniffing everything in sight, they're actually reading the calling cards of everyone – dogs, humans, cats, squirrels, and anyone or anything else, that has been there before him. Which is why he may not pay attention to you when you first get to the park – he's trying to see if any of his buddies have been there before him!
Taste - Just as with humans, taste is closely linked to the sense of
smell – the main difference is humans won't eat something that smells
bad; while dogs are the opposite – the smellier the better. Dogs will
gulp first and ask questions later. While humans many times won't eat
something that doesn't look appealing, let alone doesn't smell good,
dogs are more concerned with smell, than taste. They frequently gobble
down food before they have time to chew it, let alone taste it. But
that's ok – it's why when we clean out our refrigerators our dogs think
it's time for treats. | |
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