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Human-Dog Brain Synchronization and Its Implications for Autism

A person petting a dog.
Credit: Pontus Wellgraf / Unsplash.
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Summary

A study in Advanced Science found that human and dog brains synchronize during mutual gazing and petting, with increased synchronization over time. Dogs with autism-like social impairments lost this synchronization, but a single LSD treatment restored it. This suggests potential biomarkers for autism and the therapeutic potential of LSD.

Key Takeaways

  • Brain Synchronization: Human and dog brains synchronize during interactions, with mutual gazing affecting the frontal region and petting the parietal region.
  • Impact of Familiarity: Synchronization strength increased with familiarity over 5 days, showing humans lead while dogs follow.
  • LSD Effects: LSD reversed social impairments in dogs with autism-like symptoms, suggesting new autism biomarkers and treatment possibilities.
  • During social interactions, the activity of the brain’s neurons becomes synchronized between the individuals involved. New research published in Advanced Science reveals that such synchronization occurs between humans and dogs, with mutual gazing causing synchronization in the brain’s frontal region and petting causing synchronization in the parietal region. Both regions are associated with attention.


    The strength of this synchronization increased with growing familiarity of human–dog pairs over 5 days, and tests indicated that the human is the leader while the dog is the follower during human–dog interactions.


    Dogs with certain genetic mutations that cause them to have social impairment symptoms characteristic of autism spectrum disorder showed a loss of this synchronization, as well as reduced attention during human–dog interactions. These abnormalities were reversed by a single treatment with the psychedelic LSD.

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    “There are two implications of the present study: one is that the disrupted inter-brain synchronization might be used as a biomarker for autism, and the other is LSD or its derivatives might ameliorate the social symptoms of autism,” said corresponding author Yong Q. Zhang, PhD, of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, in Beijing.


    Reference: Ren W, Yu S, Guo K, Lu C, Zhang YQ. Disrupted human–dog interbrain neural coupling in autism-associated SHANK3 mutant dogs. Adv Sci. 2024;n/a(n/a):2402493. doi: 10.1002/advs.202402493


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