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Man's best friend? Not quite - The Columbian


Man’s best friend? Not quite
Women have a dog sleep alongside, think of them as having souls
By Erik Lacitis, The Seattle Times
Published: February 26, 2021, 6:00am
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It should be “woman’s best friend.”
Anthropologists at Washington State University analyzed 8,000 descriptions of dogs interacting with humans in 144 societies of all sorts from the Toraja in Indonesia to the Tiwi in Australia to the Northwest Coast people. They examined writings mostly from the late 1800s and early 1900s, although one reached back to Imperial Rome in 79 CE.
Dogs weren’t mentioned as being in the company of the elderly men of the Ainu indigenous culture in Japan, a researcher wrote in 1892. Rather, in small, tent-like structures, “the aged women of the village sleep in them and have dogs for companions,” wrote Smithsonian curator Romyn Hitchcock. ....

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Dogs: Man's best friend? It was women who made them family pets


Dogs: Man s best friend? It was women who made them family pets
4 Feb, 2021 01:06 AM
3 minutes to read
Men used working dogs but women made family pets of them, says study. Photo / 123RF
Daily Telegraph UK
By: Max Stephens
While kings, poets and philosophers have repeated the adage a dog is a man s best friend , a new study argues that it was women who first created the bond between canines and humans.
In one of the first anthropological studies of its kind, researchers at Washington State University revealed while men may have used dogs for hunting or herding, it was women who gave them names and treated them with affection in the way humans do today. ....

Robert Quinlan , Washington State University , Human Relations , ராபர்ட் குயின்லன் , வாஷிங்டன் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மனிதன் உறவுகள் , செல்லப்பிராணிகள் வளர்ப்பு ,

Dogs' relationships with WOMEN had a greater impact on bond


Dogs relationships with WOMEN had a greater impact on bond
Ryan Morrison For Mailonline
© Provided by Daily Mail
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Dogs are described as man s best friend but that close-relationship is more to do with how women treated them with affection and named them, a study finds.  
Washington State University researchers searched extensive collections of writings by anthropologists on traditional, subsistence-level societies around the world.
The team discovered a pattern in traditional societies where women were more involved with dogs - humans became more useful to canines. 
In traditional societies - which act as a mirror for early human history - the more a woman is involved in the care of a dog, the more it becomes part of the family -  including having a name and sleeping in its owner s bed, the authors discovered.  ....

Robert Quinlan , Washington State University , Daily Mail Mailonline , State University , Daily Mail Several , Human Relations Area Files , ராபர்ட் குயின்லன் , வாஷிங்டன் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மனிதன் உறவுகள் பரப்பளவு கோப்புகள் ,

Dogs' relationships with WOMEN had a greater impact on the dog-human bond


Dogs are described as man s best friend but that close-relationship is more to do with how women treated them with affection and named them, a study finds.  
Washington State University researchers searched extensive collections of writings by anthropologists on traditional, subsistence-level societies around the world.
The team discovered a pattern in traditional societies where women were more involved with dogs - humans became more useful to canines. 
In traditional societies - which act as a mirror for early human history - the more a woman is involved in the care of a dog, the more it becomes part of the family -  including having a name and sleeping in its owner s bed, the authors discovered.  ....

Robert Quinlan , Krishna Veeramah , Washington State University , Stony Brook University , State University , Human Relations Area File , Cattle Dog , Washington State , ராபர்ட் குயின்லன் , வாஷிங்டன் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , ஸ்டோனி சிற்றாறு பல்கலைக்கழகம் , நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மனிதன் உறவுகள் பரப்பளவு கோப்பு , கால்நடைகள் நாய் , வாஷிங்டன் நிலை ,