The Canine Brains Project has finally joined Mastodon! Here's our #introduction! 🐶 🧠 🎓

We are scientists from Harvard's Hecht Lab who are studying dog #neuroscience and #behavior. We are interested in how #genes, #neuroanatomy, #dogtraining, and lifetime experiences shape dogs' minds. We also study how dog brains and behaviors #evolve.

#dog #dogsofmastodon #evolution #EvolutionaryBiology #evolutionaryneuroscience #animalbehavior #ethology #MRI #neuroimaging #workingdogs

@caninebrainsproject amazing image! I'm surprised by the amount of morphological diversity in the brain structure. Is that consistent within a breed? Do you folks have a paper to recommend that explores this a bit?
@damiandn Yes, there is a MASSIVE amount of morphological diversity in brain structure across dogs. It's incredible that it's clearly visible with the naked eye. Neuroanatomy is consistent within dog breed groups. We're now investigating whether it is consistent within individual breeds. Here is our initial paper on brain organization across dog breed groups: https://www.jneurosci.org/content/39/39/7748
Significant Neuroanatomical Variation Among Domestic Dog Breeds

Humans have bred different lineages of domestic dogs for different tasks such as hunting, herding, guarding, or companionship. These behavioral differences must be the result of underlying neural differences, but surprisingly, this topic has gone largely unexplored. The current study examined whether and how selective breeding by humans has altered the gross organization of the brain in dogs. We assessed regional volumetric variation in MRI studies of 62 male and female dogs of 33 breeds. Neuroanatomical variation is plainly visible across breeds. This variation is distributed nonrandomly across the brain. A whole-brain, data-driven independent components analysis established that specific regional subnetworks covary significantly with each other. Variation in these networks is not simply the result of variation in total brain size, total body size, or skull shape. Furthermore, the anatomy of these networks correlates significantly with different behavioral specialization(s) such as sight hunting, scent hunting, guarding, and companionship. Importantly, a phylogenetic analysis revealed that most change has occurred in the terminal branches of the dog phylogenetic tree, indicating strong, recent selection in individual breeds. Together, these results establish that brain anatomy varies significantly in dogs, likely due to human-applied selection for behavior. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Dog breeds are known to vary in cognition, temperament, and behavior, but the neural origins of this variation are unknown. In an MRI-based analysis, we found that brain anatomy covaries significantly with behavioral specializations such as sight hunting, scent hunting, guarding, and companionship. Neuroanatomical variation is not simply driven by brain size, body size, or skull shape, and is focused in specific networks of regions. Nearly all of the identified variation occurs in the terminal branches of the dog phylogenetic tree, indicating strong, recent selection in individual breeds. These results indicate that through selective breeding, humans have significantly altered the brains of different lineages of domestic dogs in different ways.

Journal of Neuroscience
@caninebrainsproject Thanks! Can't wait to dig into this. What a fantastic model system for studying the evolution of brain morphological diversity.