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Humans believe they understand their dogs. Our research gave us pause.

  • Clive D.L. Wynne and Holly Molinaro, The Washington Post
  • May 26, 2025
  • 1 min read

Clive D.L. Wynne is a professor of psychology and director of the Canine Science Collaboratory at Arizona State University. Holly Molinaro recently completed her PhD at Arizona State.


Most of us have powerful intuitions about how our dog is feeling — starting with that flag attached to their rear end, the tail. Tail wagging: dog happy. Tail tucked: dog sad or scared. And yet the scientific literature is surprisingly quiet about whether we are actually good at reading a dog’s emotions. If people are going to care for dogs, they need to know how their pet is really feeling — so we studied just how well they understand dogs’ emotions.


Our work started during the pandemic with one of us, Clive, in Arizona and the other, Holly, in Connecticut. As we struggled to master Zoom, we realized that manipulating video could help us investigate this question.


 
 
 

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I am a behavioral scientist with a fascination for dogs and their wild relatives, a psychology professor who directs the Canine Science Collaboratory aArizona State University in Tempe, the Director of Research at Wolf Park in Battle Ground, IN, and the author of Dog Is Love.

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Department of Psychology,

P. O. Box 871104

Arizona State University

Tempe, AZ, 852810

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