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Goats Might Prefer A Smile To A Frown, Study Says

Alan McElligott, a professor of animal behavior, is eager to learn more about goat-human interactions.
Alan McElligott
Alan McElligott, a professor of animal behavior, is eager to learn more about goat-human interactions.

As the editor of a blog called Goats and Soda (see this story for the explanation behind the name), I'm always interested in the latest goat research.

So I was definitely hooked by a press release that declared, "Goats prefer happy people."

Alan McElligott, an associate professor in animal behavior at the University of Roehampton in London, led the study. He wanted to see whether animals besides dogs and horses can respond to human facial expression.

So McElligott designed an experiment to see what would happen if goats were shown two photos posted side by side on panels: a face with a smile and a face that looked mad.

He thought maybe the goats would try to rip the photos off the wall and chew on them.

Instead, he reports, "they actually do stop and look at the faces."

McElligott put 20 goats through four rounds of rigorous testing. In an article published Wednesday in Royal Society Open Science, he reports that 51 percent went to the happy face first, compared with 30 percent who approached the angry face. The remainder didn't seem to care.

The goats that were attracted to the happy face spent more time looking at that photo than the goats who picked the angry face.

Now I know what you're thinking. McElligott does, too. Is this what they spend money on now, figuring out whether goats can tell the difference between smiling and frowning faces?!

He also readily acknowledges that the results will come as no surprise to goat farmers, who are well aware that goats are pretty smart.

But he believes the general public think of goats as "kind of stupid, just roaming around, eating anything." (Including poison ivy!)

So his experiment was motivated by this belief that people have underestimated the "cognitive ability of livestock — cows, sheep and pigs and goats. We assume they're not particularly clever or perceptive," he says.

With nearly 1 billion goats in the world, McElligott wants to make people realize the benefit of treating them nicely. "We're trying to raise awareness these animals are not just like planks of wood. They have fairly advanced cognitive ability, which would also mean there's the potential to suffer" – for example, he says, when they're exported by ship or truck around the world.

Goat (and sheep) specialist Susan Schoenian, at the University of Maryland Extension, has questions about the study. I shared with her McElligott's theory that maybe goats associate the smile with the smiling faces of humans who stroke them (which is something goats like).

"I have no doubt that animals know when they've been treated kindly," she says. "But I don't know how the goats would be able to relate the pictures of faces to real people or real behavior."

She also thinks that in general, goats and other livestock "are treated very well [by the farmers who raise them] – they wouldn't be productive" otherwise in terms of offspring and milk.

"But sometimes research that gives us understanding of a behavior in an animal may lead to an understanding of it in people," she says.

So perhaps the goat study serves as a reminder that a smile is appealing to human beings as well as to ruminants.

Meanwhile, even though I'm a big goat fan, I must note that the goats in the study aren't quite as impressive as the sheep in a study about facial recognition published this past November, also in Royal Society Open Science. These sheep were trained to recognize photos of celebrities like Emma Watson on a computer screen. Then they were shown two images, one of a celebrity from the earlier test and one unfamiliar. And they definitely opted for Watson.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Marc Silver, who edits NPR's global health blog, has been a reporter and editor for the Baltimore Jewish Times, U.S. News & World Report and National Geographic. He is the author of Breast Cancer Husband: How to Help Your Wife (and Yourself) During Diagnosis, Treatment and Beyond and co-author, with his daughter, Maya Silver, of My Parent Has Cancer and It Really Sucks: Real-Life Advice From Real-Life Teens. The NPR story he co-wrote with Rebecca Davis and Viola Kosome -- 'No Sex For Fish' — won a Sigma Delta Chi award for online reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists.