Irish Daily Mail

Something to chew on: toys can boost your dog’s memory

- By Sophie Freeman news@dailymail.ie

GIVING anxious dogs a toy to chew on can help improve their memory, a study suggests.

US researcher­s assessed 34 Labrador retrievers’ performanc­e on a task, in which they had to remember which bucket a treat had been placed in over a short period of time.

The dogs were given a chew toy to bite for five minutes immediatel­y before the task, and the frequency of bites was recorded by a computer program.

Before the experiment, trainers who had worked with the dogs for at least a month completed the Canine Behavioura­l Assessment and Research Questionna­ire to rate each dog on its level of ‘fearfulnes­s’. The researcher­s from Auburn University in Alabama found: ‘In dogs with high fearfulnes­s, more frequent chewing when given access to a chew toy was associated with better spatial working memory, while the opposite was true for dogs with low fearfulnes­s.’

It’s thought that in the fearful dogs, chewing may act to reduce physiologi­cal arousal, helping them focus, while in more relaxed dogs, chewing may create a distractio­n. Dr Deborah Wells, reader in animal behaviour and welfare at Queen’s University Belfast, who was not involved in the study, said: ‘What may be happening is that the fearful dogs are gaining a more therapeuti­c effect from the chewing than the non-fearful dogs – with chewing in the former group perhaps helping to reduce cortisol levels and stress.

‘In the less fearful animals, the chewing may simply be serving as a distractor, with less of an arousal-reducing effect.’

However, the study found that, for longer-term memory, chewing may help anxious and non-anxious dogs alike. The researcher­s assessed this by giving the dogs a maze task on a different day to the bucket task.

‘We found that dogs that chewed at a greater intensity took fewer trials to relearn a maze when tested shortly after,’ said the researcher­s, whose findings are published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science.

Dr Wells added: ‘Why both groups show improvemen­ts in memory following more intense chewing is less clear, although the human literature points to enhancemen­t of sustained attention from chewing gum.’

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