Many Minds

Of breeds and brains

Nov 6, 2025
Dr. Erin Hecht, an Assistant Professor at Harvard and director of the Canine Brains Project, delves into the fascinating evolution of dog brains. She explains how domestic dogs have adapted anatomically through various domestication waves. Discussing breed-specific brain structures linked to functions like scent hunting and social interaction reveals the complexity of canine cognition. Erin also shares insights on dogs’ shared language pathways with humans and the implications of contemporary breeding practices on dog health and behavior.
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INSIGHT

Extreme Morphological Diversity

  • Dogs are the most morphologically diverse mammal, comparable only to domesticated plants like brassicas.
  • This diversity stems from intense human selection on form and function across breeds.
INSIGHT

Multiple Paths To Domestication

  • Three main domestication hypotheses exist: commensal scavenging, cooperative hunting, and puppy kidnapping.
  • Multiple scenarios could have contributed; evidence supports different aspects of each hypothesis.
ANECDOTE

How The Canine Project Began

  • Erin discovered dog neuroscience after watching a TV show about dog genetics and the Russian fox experiment.
  • She then contacted the Russian farm fox team and veterinary imaging centers to start scanning dog brains.
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