Camilla Chavez
Desmet, Charlotte, Van Der Wiel, Alko,
Brass, Marcel. (2017). “Brain regions involved in observing and trying to
interpret dog behavior”. PLOS One.
Edited by Sam Gilbert.
The authors in this article are
informing their readers if parts of the brain that process human behavior are
also involved in processing dog behavior. In order to attain accurate results
on this matter, the author gives FMRI scans to see which parts of the brain are
used when processing dog behavior. Due to FMRI scans, the author is able to
state accurate information on the topic. The result states that brain regions
are more receptive to dog behaviors that are hard to respond to than those that
are easy to respond to. The authors also performed a search on whether owning a
dog has an effect on understanding dog behavior. Being a dog owner, does
influence ones understanding in a dog’s behavior but it does not have enough
factual information for it to be considered accurate. This article withholds information
that can be helpful to people that are researching about the parts of the brain used when interpreting dogs behavior as well as the differences in dog and human
brains and the way the parts of the brain work.
Citation is correct, the thesis is there and is correct, she also put the results of the experiment and who they would help.
ReplyDeleteQuotes may be helpful in the future when actually writing the paper.
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