How to experience the world like a good dog (w/ Alexandra Horowitz)
1/12/202642 min
Can our dogs feel guilt? Or have they successfully trained us with their puppy eyes to win a treat and extra kibble? Alexandra Horowitz is a researcher and head of the Dog Cognition Lab at Barnard College; she joins Chris to chat about how dogs make us laugh and ways to be more present in life.
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Transcript preview
First 90 secondsChris Duffy· Host0:00
[upbeat music] You're listening to How to Be a Better Human. I'm your host, Chris Duffy. In today's episode, we're gonna talk a lot about attention and about noticing. But despite the fact that this is a show for humans, on today's episode, we're going to be getting our advice from dogs. Today's guest, Dr. Alexandra Horowitz, is a world-renowned scientist who studies canine cognition. That is to say, her job is to figure out what dogs think and know and feel, and she is going to help us figure out how to pay attention to the world like a dog. To get us started, here's a clip from a video Alexandra made about her research with TED-Ed, and this clip is narrated by Penpen Chen.
Pen-Pen Chen· Soundbite0:39
If you can smell a spritz of perfume in a small room, a dog would have no trouble smelling it in an enclosed stadium and distinguishing its ingredients to boot. And everything in the street, every passing person or car, any contents of the neighbor's trash, each type of tree, and all the birds and insects in it, has a distinct odor profile telling your dog what it is, where it is, and which direction it's moving in. Besides being much more powerful than ours, a dog's sense of smell can pick up things that can't even be seen at all. A whole separate olfactory system, called the vomeronasal organ, above the roof of the mouth, detects the hormones all animals, including humans, naturally release. It lets dogs identify potential mates or distinguish between friendly and hostile animals. It alerts them to our various