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Finding Genius Podcast

Take a Dog-Play Bow: Understand Your Dog Better with Sarah-Elizabeth Byosiere

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 27 October 2020

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sarah-Elizabeth Byosiere brought her lifelong love of dogs to college and found her niche through decoding dog behavior and cognition. She continued these studies in graduate school and she shares her love and knowledge with lucky listeners in today's podcast.

Listen and learn

  • Why dog play is considered interesting from an evolutionary standpoint and what Dr. Byosiere's research about the dog-play bow indicates,
  • What dog behaviors are explained by relatively new research, such as their vision, abilities to discern context-specific cues, and communication, and
  • How her group is working on improving the lives of shelter dogs and other current projects.

Dr. Byosiere is the director of the Thinking Dog Center at CUNY Hunter College. She brings a tremendous amount of knowledge to this podcast, sharing a variety of findings sure to interest dog lovers and listeners interested in animal behavior. Her initial research centered on dog social behavior as she explored the dog-play bow and what it might indicate. This classic dog pose is one of several familiar dog behavior signs thought to indicate play, but her work found it also indicates a pause or transition of activity. 

She discusses other fascinating dog traits and understandings of dog body language. Listeners may not realize that dog cognition and behavior studies really only started booming in the last 20 years, she adds, so there's much to learn. For example, dogs are really proficient at reading human cues that we might think are simple but require a complexity. This complexity is manifested in their ability to figure out context-specific cues, which even young children aren't able to do. They've evolved to be highly attentive to our human body language, not just to other dog signals and dog facial expressions.

She and Richard explore numerous behaviors observed in their own dogs, comparing them to what research indicates, covering topics like the flehmen response, their neophilic tendencies, their scent capabilities and vapor wakes, and their vision. She discusses current projects as well, such as improving the lives of shelter dogs—they're investigating easy and inexpensive methods to implement in shelters to improve the dog's experience.

For more, follow her on Twitter as @sebyosiere and see the website for the Thinking Dog Center at Hunter College. The center is also active on Instagram and Twitter.

Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Forget frequently asked questions common sense common knowledge or Google how about advice from a real genius

0:06.8

95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified and licensed 5% go and beyond. They become very good at what they do.

0:15.1

But only 0.1% are real Jesus.

0:18.3

Richard Jacobs has made it his life's mission to find them for you.

0:22.4

He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field, sleep science, cancer, stem cells,

0:27.2

ketogenic diets, and more.

0:28.8

Here come the geniuses.

0:30.4

This is the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:33.0

That is Richard Jacobs.

0:35.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:41.0

I have Sarah Elizabeth Biosier. She's the director of the

0:44.8

Thinking Dog Center at Hunter College. That's part of the City University of

0:49.3

New York System. We're gonna talk about her work with dogs.

0:53.0

So, Sarah, thanks for coming.

0:54.8

Thanks for having me today.

0:56.3

Yeah, how did you get into working with dogs?

0:58.8

Interestingly enough, I think I just sort of fell into it.

1:02.8

It was not something that I had set out to do.

1:06.1

One of those, studying animals and studying dogs like I do,

1:10.5

it's one of those things that I feel like nobody tells you as a child that you can grow up and study dog cognition and study dog behavior. You could be a vet, you could be a fireman, you could do all these other things but actually studying how animals think about the world

1:26.2

doesn't really I guess roll off the tongue and so I went to college and I went to a

1:31.7

school and my parents convinced me they were they told me are you sure you want to go to that school. We know you love animals. That's not an agriculture school. It's going to be a hard transition and I said yes, it's fine I just I really want to go to the University of Michigan that's where you guys went no big deal and first semester in I thought I had made the worst mistake of my life. I was looking around and I was like there's no animal classes here. What do I do?

...

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