A cat or a dog? Scientists made a research on which of them is smarter

Have you ever discussed whether a cat or a dog is more intelligent with your friends? Reportedly, scientists already know the answer. In this article, I mention a few facts and observations from a recently published research paper on this topic.

Have you ever discussed whether a cat or a dog is more intelligent with your friends? Reportedly, scientists already know the answer. In this article, I mention a few facts and observations from a recently published research paper on this topic.

 

Scientists have finally figured out who is smarter – a cat or a dog. In a research published in Frontiers in Neuroanatomy magazine, the scientists focused not only on the size of animals’ brains but also on the number of neurons in their neocortex. These grey cells, Hercule Poirot counted on when solving complicated crimes, are connected to thinking, planning and complex behaviour.

 

And what did they find out? The result may be a surprise for some of you. Even though cats are able to spread kind of an aura of (not only) intellectual superiority, they have half of the neurons less than an average golden retriever. While dogs have about 530 million neurons, there are only about 250 million in a cat’s brain (for comparison, a human has ca. 16 billion).

 

Doctor Suzana Herculano-Houzel, a faculty member of Vanderbilt University in Tennessee focusing on psychology and natural sciences, believes that the absolute number of neurons of an animal and especially those in the neocortex defines its mental capabilities and abilities to predict what is going to happen in their surroundings based on previous experience. The conclusion is that dogs have the ability to do much more complex and flexible things with their lives than cats.

 

In this research, also the brains of ferrets, raccoons, mongoose, hyenas, lions and brown bears were also examined. This group of carnivores was chosen to contain various brain sizes of both domesticated and wild animals. Ferrets have the least neurons and bears have only one more neuron compared to cats. After retrievers, lions have the biggest number of neurons closely followed by hyenas.

 

Anyway, the research showed that many animals with large brains have a small number of neurons and vice versa. A golden retriever can stand as an example of this fact, it has more neurons than animals with three times bigger brains. On the contrary, a bear has the same number of neurons as a cat, even though it has a ten times larger brain.

 

According to Cellia Haddon, a cat behaviourist and an author of a book on this topic, the reason why cats have less neurons than dogs may be the fact they are not so social animals as dogs. Dogs’ origins are in wolves who hunt in a pack and that’s why they need to master complicated, complex behaviour to be able to cooperate. In contrast, cats who hunt and often even live alone do not have such skills.

 

But does that mean that dogs are more intelligent than cats? After all, they get full bowls of goodies, our care and attention without having to do anything for that :). A breeder club however noted that most dog owners think their pets are the more intelligent (what a surprise).

 

However, this research at least gives us the explanation why dogs are so versatile. The fact why dogs are useful in so many social roles, from police officers and assistance dogs to guide, search and rescue dogs.

 

So what about you, do you agree with the conclusion of the research? Or do you rather tend to agree with Celia Haddon that the fact cats do not have so complex behavioural skills as dogs and they are not so much social as dogs does not mean they are more stupid?

 

Related articles

History of search and rescue dogs

The use of dogs in search and rescue (the so-called SAR) is an integral part of natural disasters, mass accidents or, for example, when search for missing people. Do you know, when the first dog rescuers appeared?

Call of the wild? What is dog puberty like

Every dog has its individuality and is unique in its own way, so even the period of growing up can differ significantly in every individual. I know dog owners, who didn’t know what to do with puberty excesses of their otherwise loved four-legged...

Dog sled

One dog isn’t enough for you and you’re looking for an excuse that will help you vindicate having a whole pack at home? One option is to become a musher - a dog sled racer. For adrenaline lovers, who’d love to ride through the landscape on a sled using...

So cold you wouldn’t send the dog out

It’s like a rollercoaster ride with outside temperatures this winter, once you’re up and then back down. All the more attention should we pay to the care for our dogs. Since it’s not only us, people, who don’t take well to the changing temperatures.

Dog and cat insurance

Unfortunately, in the life of dog owners, even unpleasant situations occur, which aren’t only an intervention in the life of your dog partner, but also affect your wallet. For example, if the dog gets hit by a car or it is otherwise injured and the...

Facts about cat eyes

Kittens, as well as a number of other animal offspring, are born blind. Their eyes open around the tenth day of their life and only after another week, they are fully functional. Even though the sight in a cat belongs among the best-developed senses,...