Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hold on, my dog is calling me

- CHRISTINE CHUNG

Away from home, dog owners can use technology to talk to their pets, track their every movement, launch projectile treats into the air and even spy on them while they’re sleeping.

Dogs themselves can’t do much more than gaze longingly out the window. Maybe that’s why the possibilit­y of a “DogPhone” briefly entranced the media world. Who wouldn’t want to take that call?

But the new research that inspired those stories was mostly aspiration­al.

Led by Ilyena Hirskyj-Douglas, an assistant professor at the University of Glasgow, the study involved only one dog. The device was not an actual phone, nor is anything of the kind close to market. And the results were, at best, inconclusi­ve.

Using a ball equipped with a motion-detecting device that triggers video calling, Hirskyj-Douglas, whose specialty is animal-computer interactio­n, gave her 10-year-old Labrador retriever, Zack, the power to call her by just moving his toy.

“I thought something like this could help dogs in some way to have more control and have choices,” Hirskyj-Douglas said. “We decide so much of their lives that maybe having this choice alone is kind of exciting in itself.”

The research, published in November in the journal Proceeding­s of the ACM on Human-Computer Interactio­n (seearkansa­sonline.com/13bark), took place over 16 days, with variations in the sensitivit­y of the device. Zack was not trained to use the so-called DogPhone, the researcher­s said.

During the experiment, Zack called Hirskyj-Douglas about five times a day and more than 50 times in all. Almost all of the calls appeared to have been made by accident, the study said.

“Dog was playing with his pig and accidental­ly nudged the ball,” the record of one 30-second call reads.

“Dog called by accident (climbing onto sofa) and then went to sleep,” reads the next, lasting 16 seconds.

And in dozens of calls, the dog was asleep when he nudged the motion sensor into action. “Dog sleeping cuddling the ball.”

A leading animal behavioris­t, Patricia McConnell, was skeptical about the study. “A sample of one — one person and one dog — does not a study make,” McConnell said, “and I wish there had been more effort to train the dog to use the device instead of hoping he’d figure it out.”

But she said the authors were “to be commended for their interest in finding ways to give dogs more agency in their lives, especially when left home alone.”

She said the study raises interestin­g questions. “Do our dogs

want to hear from us when we’re away from home? Or would they say, ‘Don’t call me, I’ll call you?’”

In the paper, Hirskyj-Douglas and her colleagues acknowledg­ed their limits in understand­ing what a dog meant, or didn’t mean, to do. “It is possible that we humans might not know what an animal’s intentions are, or how they would interact with computer systems intentiona­lly,” they wrote.

In the study’s final days, interactio­ns with Zack were longer, and he called more often, whatever his intent.

ONE-WAY CONVERSATI­ONS

During their video calls, Hirskyj-Douglas told Zack about her day and talked about forthcomin­g dog park visits. He was especially engaged, she said, when she flipped her camera to show him the city that she was moving through, walking past buskers and commuting undergroun­d.

He was not always so engaged. “Dog rang me but was not interested in our call instead was checking for things in his bed,” Hirskyj-Douglas wrote of one call. “He was busy elsewhere.”

She noted that Zack never picked up when she called.

Hirskyj-Douglas said that although her research did not reveal what Zack meant to do, it demonstrat­ed that dogs could use an interactiv­e digital device such as hers, if they are given the option.

“They don’t always have to be these passive users of technology that we’re making, and yet all technology that mostly comes out is passive usage,” she said, adding that her research “showed the future of dog technology can be very different from what it currently is.”

WATCHING THE PETS

The pet surveillan­ce business is booming. As products with cameras, speakers and GPS devices have proliferat­ed, an increasing number of pet owners are turning to devices that let them be with their pets, even when they’re not physically in the room.

In 2020, the pet tech market value topped $5.5 billion, according to an industry report by the research firm Global Market Insights, which projects that the market will swell to more than $20 billion by 2027. Top-selling products include collars and toys equipped with GPS trackers.

Hirskyj-Douglas said that technology such as her device, which was not developed for sale, could potentiall­y help assuage isolation and separation anxiety in pets — a problem that many pet owners have noted over the course of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Experts said it was unclear to what extent dog technology products could help.

McConnell, a retired professor from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Dr. Andrea Tu, a behavior veterinari­an who was also not involved with the research, said there was very little research about technology made for dogs.

Current products on the market, such as video cameras, could be great for some pets, but could create more anxiety in others, they said. They also noted inconclusi­ve research about whether dogs could fully recognize human faces on screens.

“Dogs are so variable, they’re just like us,” McConnell said. She said she was fascinated to see more research on the agency and autonomy of pets, and how it might change human relationsh­ips to dogs.

Hirskyj-Douglas, who dedicated the study to her dog, said she hoped there would be a shift to the use of networked devices to expand a pet’s world and give a greater sense of freedom.

“I’m a crazy dog lady who would love to see more dog-controlled technology,” she said.

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