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Thursday March 28, 2024

No kidding: goats prefer happy faces

By REUTERS
September 28, 2018

LONDON: Goats shown happy and angry human faces prefer the happy ones, according to research published by a team of life scientists from Britain, Germany and Brazil. The study, led by Dr Alan McElligott at London’s Queen Mary University, is among the first to provide evidence that goats can read human expressions.

Dogs, horses and pandas can also distinguish between different human facial expressions, similar studies have shown. Researchers tested 20 goats at Buttercups Sanctuary for Goats in Maidstone, Kent, about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of London, using pairs of black-and-white photographs of the same person. The photos, pinned at one end of a gated arena about 1.3 metres apart, included one of a person smiling and another of the same person looking angry.

Researchers found the happy pictures led to greater interaction from the goats that looked at the images, for instance, by examining them with their snouts. “The goats really did stop in the enclosure and look at the photographs and examined them closely. They didn’t just walk over and try to pull the photographs off the wall or chew on them or anything like that,” McElligott told Reuters.