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Published 12:31 29 Sept 2022 BST
The dogs were able to detect stress in an individual's breath and sweat to an accuracy of 93.75 percent (iStock)[/caption]
Clara Wilson, the lead author of the study, told Medical News Today: “It was fascinating to see how able the dogs were at discriminating between these odors when the only difference was that a psychological stress response had occurred."
She added that the training was "very extensive, as the premise was that the dogs needed to be consistently able to discriminate between two very similar human odors with known differences at above 80% correct for multiple sessions."
The training involved the pooches first identifying one of three containers that had food and a sweat sample in.
Researchers then removed the food, simply presenting the animals with three ports. One port held a human sweat and breath sample, and two others held blank samples. The dog had to identify the one with the sample in.
Then, human participants provided sweat and breath samples along with a self-report questionnaire about the level of stress they were experiencing at the time, before completing a mental arithmetic task and providing another sample once completed.
The dogs were then presented with a sweat and breath sample from a stressed participant and two blank samples.
[caption id="attachment_361209" align="alignnone" width="2048"]
A dog's remarkable sense of smell can be used to detect a number of diseases in humans. This dog is detecting a sample of malaria from a row of pots (Leon Neal/Getty)[/caption]
In the next phase, researchers filled one port with a sweat and breath sample from a stressed participant, another port with a sweat and breath sample taken before the participant underwent the mental task, and a blank.
Each dog completed 10 phase 1 trials and 20 phase 2 discrimination trials. For the study, the researchers focused on the phase where dogs had to discriminate between the stressed and baseline samples.
Overall, the dogs detected the stress sample in 93.75% of the trials. Individually, they ranged in performance from detecting the stress sample 90% to 96.88% of the time.
It's the latest way that scientists have been able to use a dog's incredible sense of smell to detect changes in human health.
Canines can already be trained to become diabetic alert dogs and detect changes in a person's blood sugar, or to detect people with malaria parasites by their odour.
It is even possible for dogs to be trained to detect lung cancer in a person's breath.
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