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Research on dogs might shed light on human responses to food: Study

Researchers in Hungary who found that normal and overweight dogs behaved differently in tasks involving food say the dogs’ responses were similar to what might be expected in normal and overweight humans

Krisztina Fenyo (Reuters)
Budapest, Hungary
Sun, June 17, 2018

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Research on dogs might shed light on human responses to food: Study Bucka, the 11 year-old overweight mongrel dog, is seen during a test trying to find the reasons for obesity at the Ethology Department of the ELTE University in Budapest. (REUTERS/Tamas Kaszas)

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span data-qa-component="highlight-text">Researchers in Hungary who found that normal and overweight dogs behaved differently in tasks involving food say the dogs’ responses were similar to what might be expected in normal and overweight humans.

The study suggested dogs could be used as models for future research into the causes and psychological impacts of human obesity, the authors of the paper from Budapest's ELTE University said.

Researchers put two bowls - one of them holding a good meal, the other empty or containing less attractive food - in front of a series of dogs.

The study found that canines of a normal weight continued obeying instructions to check the second bowl for food, but the obese ones refused after a few rounds.

Read also: Don't feed your dog raw meat, study says

Bucka, the 11 year-old overweight mongrel dog eats during a test trying to find the reasons for obesity at the Ethology Department of the ELTE University in Budapest.
Bucka, the 11 year-old overweight mongrel dog eats during a test trying to find the reasons for obesity at the Ethology Department of the ELTE University in Budapest. (REUTERS/Tamas Kaszas)

"We expected the overweight dog to do anything to get food, but in this test, we saw the opposite. The overweight dogs took a negative view," test leader Orsolya Torda said.

"If a situation is uncertain and they cannot find food, the obese dogs are unwilling to invest energy to search for food - for them the main thing is to find the right food with least energy involved."

The behaviour had possible parallels with overweight people who see food as a reward, said the paper published in the Royal Society Open Science journal.

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