Can dogs tell when we are happy, sad or angry? As a dog owner, I feel confident not only that I can tell what kind of emotional state my pets are in, but also that they respond to my emotions. Yet as a hard-headed scientist, I try to take a more rational and pragmatic view. These personal observations seem more likely to result from my desire for a good relationship with my dogs.
The problem is that studying emotional interpretations and responses across two interacting species is very difficult.
For one thing, you can't ask a dog how it's feeling. So while many people can describe how their dogs respond to their emotional states - typically in ways we humans consider appropriate and perhaps even desirable - scientific evidence and explanation for this ability has mostly been elusive.
However, a new study, published in the journal Biology Letters, suggests that dogs really can recognise emotions in both humans and other dogs using visual and audio cues.