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Science

DogPhone Lets Pets Ring Their Owners (theguardian.com) 53

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: [R]esearchers have created a hi-tech option for canines left home alone: a ball that allows them to call their owners on the old dog and bone. The device -- nicknamed the DogPhone -- is a soft ball that, when moved, sends a signal to a laptop that launches a video call, and the sound of a ringing telephone. The owner can choose whether to take the call, and when to hang up, while they can also place a call to their pet -- although the dog has to move the ball to pick up.

The research, which is published in the Proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery on Computer-Human interaction and is being presented at the 2021 ACM Interactive Surfaces and Spaces Conference in Lodz, Poland, reveals how [Dr Ilyena Hirskyj-Douglas, of the University of Glasgow, and first author of the research] and researchers from Aalto University in Finland settled on a soft ball to create the device. The DogPhone underwent a number of iterations to ensure it had the right level of sensitivity towards movement -- these were tested over 16 days by Hirskyj-Douglas and her nine-year-old black labrador, Zack.

A diary detailing the calls between owner and pet suggests the latter did not always seem to know what he was doing -- despite having been shown five times how the system worked. "Dog rang me but was not interested in our call instead was checking for things in his bed," Hirskyj-Douglas noted during the testing of one iteration. Another entry reveals the potential pitfalls of the DogPhone. "Dog walking around wagging and then laying down. I was in a meeting so had to hang up quickly," one record reveals. The team say that many of the calls made by Zack -- who was left alone for about eight hours during testing days -- appear to have been accidents although they caution that may simply be the human perspective. "For example, when the dog triggered the system with their butt, this could have been deliberate and the dog's unique way of triggering an interaction," they write.

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DogPhone Lets Pets Ring Their Owners

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  • This is silly. Most dogs, if not all, can't recognize 2D images of their owners.
    • They can however recognize voices very well.

      Still seems pretty stupid -
      Give the dog a ball that calls their human when they play with it.
      Pretend the fact that they play with it means they intended to call their human
      .
      .
      Profit

  • by Lost Penguin ( 636359 ) on Friday November 19, 2021 @10:39PM (#62004083)
    Your dog's only button. "Steak"
  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Friday November 19, 2021 @10:51PM (#62004103) Homepage
    We're just 10 years away from dog/human translators. Ten years I say! Invest now (woof woof).
  • by weeboo0104 ( 644849 ) on Friday November 19, 2021 @10:54PM (#62004111) Journal

    Specifically African Grey Parrots. I had an African Grey for 25 years that used to ring like my cordless phone when I first got her to get me to run into the room. She would also call our dog by name, and when the dog came into the room tell her "good girl".

    The bird would also call my wife and I by name and ask for specific things like; shower, food, outside, and would tell us when she wanted to go to bed.

    We just adopted another Grey a few months ago. He was already 20 years old and when he wants the dog, says "come here girl".

    I'm pretty sure if there was a means for the bird to pick up a video call, they would do it if they knew their favorite people were on the other side.

    • by angel'o'sphere ( 80593 ) <angelo.schneider ... e ['oom' in gap]> on Saturday November 20, 2021 @07:08AM (#62004611) Journal

      You might find this intreating: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Not sure how accurate that article is, it claims the parrot used more than 100 words. I have heard stories that he used close to 1000 and was teaching other parrots to speaking.

      The interesting part is not the amount of words, but his cognitive abilities: he could identify 50 different objects and recognize quantities up to six; that he could distinguish seven colors and five shapes, and understand the concepts of "bigger", "smaller", "same", and "different", and that he was learning "over" and "under".[2] Alex passed increasingly difficult tests measuring whether humans have achieved Piaget's Substage 6 object permanence. Alex showed surprise and anger when confronted with a nonexistent object or one different from what he had been led to believe was hidden during the tests.[14]

      He actually invented his own words, for things that where to complicated for him to pronounce, so strawberry became "red banana" or something like that ...

      • I hope it is accurate and not a bunch of bullshit like with that gorilla.

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        [Parrot understood] the concepts of "bigger", "smaller", "same", and "different"

        Keep that bigmouth parrot out of the restroom.

    • Or maybe Zack (the test subject dog) was just dumb unlike Chaser [wikipedia.org].
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Parrot when guests are over: "Not tonight, I have a headache; not tonight, I have a headache..."

  • My kids are constantly trying to talk to the dog over facetime, or get grandma to talk to the dog over facetime. He doesn't get it and doesn't give a crap. The dog might hear you or see you, but its not you, the touch and warmth are missing. Your dog is no dummy.

    • Dogs cant detect refresh rates over 90hz, anything under that looks like a bad lsd trip. This is destined to fail from the start

      • by Calydor ( 739835 )

        How exactly do you reckon anything under 90hz looks like a bad LSD trip? We've kinda lived with that for a lot of years on TV without thinking we were tripping.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Vision is far more important to humans than it is to dogs. Humans are very visually oriented; we have one of the most advanced and capable senses of vision known. Our sense of vision is as far superior to dogs' as dogs' sense of smell is to ours.

      Imagine making a machine that could reproduce the smell of an individual person into a room. That would be very interesting to dogs, but humans would likely not respond to it at all.

      • Humans are not even close. The mantis shrimp is the absolute top and many predatory birds far surpass us and most birds have tetrachromatic vision. Humans might have the best vision of any mammal but I'm not sure.
        • There's no such thing as "best" because "best" is defined by whatever the optimization objective is.

          Birds may have 4 color vision, and far higher acuity, but on the other hand... our eyes aren't fixed in our heads, and our heads don't have to behave like gyroscopically stabilized platforms to keep them stable enough for use.

          The acuity of health young humans' vision (circa 20/10 or not far off), and the corresponding packing density of cones in the fovea, approach the theoretical limit of optical perfo
          • Birds may have 4 color vision, and far higher acuity, but on the other hand... our eyes aren't fixed in our heads, and our heads don't have to behave like gyroscopically stabilized platforms to keep them stable enough for use.

            Some birds can move their eyes. Many have lost the ability, trading larger (and so more acute) eyeballs and weight (eye musculature is not free) against needing to move their head. But that isn't really a vision tradeoff: it's part of why some birds have such incredibly sharp vision es

          • Humans probably have the best vision for tool use and reading. Our brain's vision system is the best at detecting human faces.
            But we're not good at spotting mice from the air, better than a dog but not the best.

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            I didn't say "best"; I said "advanced". Except for raptors birds do *not* have functionally higher visual acuity than humans, although they may have higher density of visual cells *on average* over the whole retina.

          • Also it makes no sense for animals to have as good vision as humans. The real trick is the huge brain, that is able to make sense of all that information. Without that brain, animal vision that challenges human vision is just tunnel vision

        • Predatory bird eyes are optimised for extreme resolution, so they can spot prey at great distance - but it comes at a cost. Their night vision is terrible - can't see anything in low light. Except owls. They went the other way: Optimised low-light vision, but at the cost of lower acuity.

          Primates, including humans, are notable for their good vision among mammals - especially color vision. The vast majority of mammal species have dichromatic vision, with correspondingly limited ability to distinguish colors.

        • You're completely ignoring how much more advanced the human visual cortex is.

      • Imagine making a machine that could reproduce the smell of an individual person into a room.

        John Waters was ahead of his time [wikipedia.org].

    • by tmmagee ( 1475877 ) on Saturday November 20, 2021 @12:41AM (#62004233)
      The Metaverse will need smell-o-vision if it wants to attract dogs
    • Some dogs get it. I didn't even have to video call my old dog, just my voice was enough to get her attention. She'd get excited for a bit, but also kind of frustrated when she realized it was just my voice instead of me.
  • The pet doesn't make an association between the ball and the owner (who would?). Without that association, it would be difficult to progress in the experiment.

    The obvious solution is for the owner to piss on the ball each morning before work. The dog's natural instink is to associate that smell with the owner and to expect phone calls soon.

    • No need to be so gross as pissing on it. Humans have scent glands (essentially) in their armpits and groin that can be used. I suspect your dog will be much more familiar with scents from those places than the scent of your piss. Just rub it on your armpits every morning and that'll be good enough.

  • Next thing, dogs will want expensive iDogPhones (or iBalls) from Apple -- and iCloths to clean them.

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Saturday November 20, 2021 @01:00AM (#62004241) Journal

    Amazon was trying to do a lot of this stuff with the Echo Dots ... You can set up custom actions so when it detects your dog barking, it lets you "drop in" and talk to your dog through it, trigger it to play soothing music, and so on.

    I've heard people say their dog grew to HATE the Echo Dot and started trying to attack/bite/eat it because, "Stupid puck keeps pretending to be my owner but my human isn't really here at all!"

  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Saturday November 20, 2021 @01:27AM (#62004255)

    Are these people trying to inflict the COVID-19 "always connected - work from home" type anxiety on their dogs? Domestic dogs sleep most of their life. They are happy to do so. Why bother them just to satisfy some emotional need of the owner?

  • Dogs can be trained to do a task. You can train them to "call", but they will not do it off their own free will. That will be an expression of the trainer's will. They will call because you trained them to. And after that they will not know what to do with that.

    So if you want a pet really calling an owner because they want to, chose a pet which may do that and has the intelligence to match - African Grey, Macao, Cockatoo or one of the "human oriented" cat breeds - Bengal, Russian Blue/White/Black (all thr

  • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Saturday November 20, 2021 @03:13AM (#62004329) Journal

    ...you shouldn't have gotten a dog.

    • Yep! It's pretty easy to learn what your dog is "saying" to you, if you just pay attention. They really aren't that hard to read!

      • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

        I think you missed my point... if you need to leave your dog alone at home during the day, you are not in a position to own a dog.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday November 20, 2021 @04:46AM (#62004451)

    There's nothing worse than a neighbour who claims their dog never barks, while the dog drives the entire neighbourhood nuts. Of course he doesn't bark when you're home, he barks when he misses you.

  • Specifically, the Ig Nobels.

  • Some say that now the dog owns the ex-owner.
  • He was just butt dialing like people do...
  • And BananaPhone lets bananas call their prospective eaters.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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