Thursday, 5 March 2026
Dubai expats and residents abandoning & kills pets due to Iran war
Wednesday, 4 March 2026
When Humans Need Help, Dogs Step Up and Cats Step Back
If you’ve ever dropped the remote beneath the sofa and watched your dog eagerly dive under to investigate while your cat gazes on with elegant disinterest, you’re not imagining things. New research published in the journal Animal Behaviour suggests that in situations where a human needs help — even when no help was requested — dogs are strikingly more likely than cats to offer assistance, and in some ways they behave much like young children. (doi.org)
The study, titled “Dogs’ behaviour is more similar to that of children than to that of cats in a prosocial problem situation”, was conducted by researchers at Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary and involved a straightforward yet revealing experiment. (doi.org)
In the core setup, the scientists brought together three very different groups of familiar companions: pet dogs, pet cats, and toddlers aged 16 to 24 months. In each household, an adult hid a neutral object — such as a dishwashing sponge — in plain view of the child or animal, then began searching for it without asking for help. Researchers watched to see how each subject responded. (The Times)
What emerged was a clear pattern. While all three groups paid attention to both the hidden object and the searching adult, only the dogs and toddlers typically took action. More than three-quarters of the dogs and toddlers either looked back and forth from the object to the adult in a way that signalled they understood the adult’s difficulty, or physically approached and retrieved the object for them. (doi.org)
By contrast, the cats rarely engaged in such “helping behaviour.” Despite observing the same scenario and showing interest, most felines simply watched their human’s puzzlement unfold. They did not approach or attempt to indicate where the object was. Only when the hidden item had personal relevance for the cat — a treat or favourite toy — did their level of engagement climb to match that of the dogs and toddlers. (The Times)
The researchers interpret these findings in the context of evolutionary history and domestication. Dogs evolved as highly social animals whose ancestors cooperated in hunting and guarding within packs, and over thousands of years of living with humans they’ve been selected for responsiveness to human cues and challenges. That deep social wiring may make them naturally inclined to notice a human’s struggle and respond proactively — even without explicit training or reward. (doi.org)
Cats, on the other hand, trace their lineage to largely solitary hunters and appear to have “domesticated themselves” by settling around human settlements in pursuit of food sources like rodents. This form of domestication, while it led to close bonds with humans, didn’t select for cooperative or prosocial problem-solving in quite the same way. As a result, cats may be perfectly capable of understanding a human’s goal but less motivated to intervene unless there’s something in it for them. (The Times)
Importantly, this research does not imply that cats are uncaring or incapable of forming bonds with their people. Rather, it highlights a difference in when and why these species choose to act. Dogs may instinctively weave humans’ needs into their own behavioural repertoire, while cats — ever the independent spirits — may reserve their involvement for matters directly relevant to their own interests. (doi.org)
In a world full of affectionate anecdotes about both species, the study provides a fascinating scientific lens on a common experience: when help really counts, you might find more four-legged assistance from a wagging tail than a flicking one. (The Times)
My observation: the result is unsurprising as the dog is a pack animal looking to their leader (alpha) for guidance and the cat is a solitary animal albeit socialised and adapted to living with humans resulting in close bonds often.
P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.
Wednesday, 25 February 2026
Captive Siberian tigers in China overfed by tourists
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| Siberian tiger in the wild in China. |
Evidence for weight loss is mixed. Reviews of clinical trials show that intermittent fasting often performs no better than standard calorie‑restricted diets, and in many cases offers only modest or uncertain benefits. Long‑term effectiveness remains unclear, and some people may compensate by overeating during eating periods.
Short‑term side effects are common. These can include hunger, irritability, low energy, difficulty concentrating, and disrupted sleep. Some individuals experience patterns of overeating or find the regimen difficult to sustain. Intermittent fasting may also be unsuitable for people with diabetes, those taking glucose‑lowering medications, individuals with a history of eating disorders, and some older adults.
Overall, while intermittent fasting can be tolerated by many, research indicates meaningful uncertainties and potential risks, particularly with very restrictive eating windows."
AI writing is perfect but characterless and noticeably so
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| AI writing is perfect in all ways but tends to be characterless and hollow. This image was created by AI. |
Monday, 23 February 2026
Cat Attachment or Catastrophe? Questioning Methodology in Feline Research
That single design choice collapses the argument before it begins.
Therapy cats are not - to be realistic - typical domestic cats. They are selected for exceptional sociability. They are screened for calm temperaments. They are repeatedly exposed to strangers, transport, novel rooms, and unpredictable environments. They are conditioned, through experience, to treat unfamiliar humans as routine.
They are behavioural specialists.
And the study’s entire logic depends on mild stress revealing attachment preference.
Attachment testing, derived from the Strange Situation paradigm, works by introducing manageable stress and observing whether the subject seeks comfort from a primary attachment figure. Stress activates preference. Preference reveals bond strength.
But therapy cats are, by design, desensitised to precisely those stressors.
If a cat has spent years visiting hospitals, care homes, and public spaces, being handled by strangers and transported to new environments, then a laboratory room with an unfamiliar person is not meaningfully stressful. It is Tuesday.
Remove the stress response and the test ceases to function.
The absence of dramatic owner-seeking behaviour under those conditions does not prove the absence of attachment. It proves habituation.
What the Study Attempted
The researchers used a modified version of the Ainsworth Strange Situation Test, originally developed for human infants and later adapted for dogs. Cats were observed during separations and reunions with their owners, and during interactions with a stranger in an unfamiliar room.
They measured behaviours associated with:
“Secure base” effects, meaning increased exploration when the owner is present
“Safe haven” responses, meaning comfort-seeking under stress
They reported little evidence of exclusive owner preference and concluded that classical attachment theory may not apply to cats. The concept of “Cattachment,” they argue, may be biologically irrelevant.
That is a sweeping conclusion.
But sweeping conclusions require representative samples.
The Representativeness Problem
Therapy cats are not representative of the domestic cat population. They occupy the extreme sociability end of the behavioural spectrum. They are chosen because they tolerate novelty. They are retained because they cope well with strangers. Those that show fear or distress do not qualify.
This is selection bias embedded in the sample.
To generalise from therapy cats to “cats” as a species is to treat a specialised occupational subgroup as a biological norm. It is equivalent to studying elite endurance athletes and concluding that humans do not experience fatigue under prolonged exertion.
The logic does not survive scrutiny.
If anything, therapy cats are the least suitable group for testing owner-exclusive attachment under mild stress. Their professional role requires them to distribute sociability widely. Their reinforcement history rewards calmness with unfamiliar people. They are trained ambassadors, not anxious homebodies.
Testing them for stress-induced attachment behaviours is methodologically incoherent.
Ecological Misalignment
There is also the issue of context.
Cats are territorial animals. Their security is deeply tied to familiar space. Removing them from home already disrupts normal behavioural patterns. A novel room may trigger scanning, withdrawal, or immobility. Those behaviours can mask subtle social preferences.
A dog, bred for cooperative work with humans, may show overt proximity-seeking. A cat may express attachment differently, or more quietly. Failure to display dog-style attachment is not evidence of absence.
Yet the study imports a framework built for infants and dogs, applies it to a species with a different evolutionary history, and then declares the framework biologically irrelevant when the results do not align neatly.
That is not discovery. That is methodological mismatch.
The Overreach
The title claims the biological irrelevance of “Cattachment.” That is a species-level claim.
But the data, based on therapy cats exposed to mild laboratory stress, can support only a narrow statement:
“Therapy cats did not display strong owner-exclusive behaviours under these test conditions.”
Anything broader exceeds the evidence.
Scientific conclusions must be proportionate to design. When the sample is behaviourally skewed and contextually artificial, bold generalisations become fragile.
The Bottom Line
If therapy cats formed the basis of this study, then the flaw is not peripheral. It is foundational.
The researchers asked whether cats form attachment bonds. They selected animals specifically conditioned to appear calm and sociable in unfamiliar settings. They introduced mild stress unlikely to register as stress for those animals. They observed limited owner preference. Then they questioned the biological relevance of feline attachment.
The chain of reasoning depends on a sample incapable of representing the species.
When you study ambassadors and conclude that citizens do not prefer their own country, the problem is not with the citizens.
It is with the sample.
PS
Domestic cats do form attachments to their caregivers. This is widely recognised in behavioural science and in everyday observation. The caregiver functions as a secure provider of food, safety, warmth, and social interaction. In many respects, the human becomes a surrogate maternal figure.
Domestication has altered feline development in important ways. Adult domestic cats retain juvenile behavioural traits, a phenomenon well documented in domesticated species. This prolonged kitten-like social flexibility supports bonding with human caregivers.
It is natural. It is normal. It is observable in households across the world.
To deny that attachment exists because a small group of professionally desensitised cats did not perform to a particular theoretical script is not bold science.
It is a misreading of the animal.
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