One dogs contem....contemp....con-tem..pla-tions on daily life........oh, stop rolling your eyes already and give me break, I'm a dog, for Gods sakes...

The benefits of puppy love: Why taking pictures of cute animals into the office could make you work harder


The benefits of puppy love: Why taking pictures of cute animals into the office could make you work harder

Putting a picture of a cute puppy or kitten on your desk could make you work harder, research suggests.
Looking at pictures of baby animals can improve your concentration by a tenth, a study found.
Researchers also discovered that people who gazed at photographs of puppies and kittens performed better than those who looked at images of adult animals.
Experts believe that becoming more focused is brought on by a cuteness-triggered positive emotion associated with taking motivation from anything that gives you happiness, pleasure, or joy.
The study based its findings on three groups of students - one which looked at images of baby animals, another which looked at adult animals and another which was shown pictures of tasty foods.
Each group was then asked to take part in exercises testing their concentration.
The performance of the group looking at puppies and kittens improved by an average of 10 per cent.
The students looking at adult animals saw performance increase by 5 per cent on average, but the images of food had little effect on the third group.
One of the authors of the study, Hiroshi Nittono of Japan's Hiroshima University, said: 'This study shows that viewing cute things improves subsequent performance in tasks that require behavioural carefulness, possibly by narrowing the breadth of attentional focus.
'This effect is not specific to tasks related to caregiving or social interaction.
'Cute features not only make objects more user-friendly and approachable, but also induce careful behavioural tendencies in the users, which is beneficial in specific situations, such as driving and office work.'
 

Lovesick Dog Finds Owner in Hospital


As John Dolan lay in a hospital bed at the Good Samaritan Medical Center in Islip, N.Y., last Thursday, he got a phone call he least expected.
A hospital employee, later identified as a man named Rick, told Dolan that he was standing outside the hospital with a white samoyed dog whose tag listed Dolan as the owner. The man told Dolan he needed to come pick up the dog because he was late for work.
Dolan, 46, said the dog was indeed his, but he couldn’t come right away because he was inside the hospital and his wife was asleep at their home, two miles away.
It was then that the two men wondered, how did Zander get so close to Dolan’s bedside, so many miles from home?
“It’s not nonsense that he was at the hospital,” Dolan, resting at home with Zander by his side, told ABCNews.com today. “He was moping around for the days I was already at the hospital, sitting in my seat and rolled up and depressed. My wife said he had water in his eyes and looked like he was really sad.”
Zander is a 70-pound, approximately 7-year-old samoyed-husky mix that Dolan and his wife had rescued from a shelter five years ago who has a history of escaping.
Once Dolan reached his wife, Priscilla, they realized that Zander must have slipped out the back door of their Bay Shore home after Priscilla Dolan took their other two dogs, a red shepherd named Sheba and a chocolate lab named Penny, out earlier that morning.
Priscilla Dolan didn’t realize Zander was missing until she got her husband’s call for help. She drove to the hospital to meet Rick and pick up Zander.
The Dolan’s home is two miles from the hospital, but a “hard two miles,” according to Dolan, that includes a stream, a highway and tricky navigation through neighborhood streets.
The hospital is also in a direction where Zander had never gone on his previous escapes.
“For all I know he was on his way to Jersey,” Dolan joked. “He’s gotten out in the past, but never gone to that location or anywhere near it [the hospital].”
Dolan said that of the couple’s three dogs Zander, in particular, is known to stick by his owner’s side and has been even more loyal since his return.
He says an important lesson from his dog’s amazing journey is for dog owners to properly tag their pets so that all reunions can have the same happy endings as his and Zander’s.
“It’s a cool story and uplifting,” Dolan said of his own tale. “Who knows how or why it happened.”