Star-spotting sheep who can recognise Barack Obaaa-ma

Sheep have demonstrated a celebrity-spotter's ability to recognise faces of famous people, including former US President Barack Obama.
A sheep looking at a picture of Barack Obama during the celebrity-spotting experiment at Cambridge UniversityA sheep looking at a picture of Barack Obama during the celebrity-spotting experiment at Cambridge University
A sheep looking at a picture of Barack Obama during the celebrity-spotting experiment at Cambridge University

The animals were already known to respond to familiar faces, both of other members of their own species and humans.

In the new study scientists showed how they could be taught to recognise screen-shot images of celebrity faces using food rewards. They were even able to identify faces seen from an angle with about the same success rate as a human.

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Researchers also discovered that sheep can recognise images of their human handlers without any previous training.

Shown a portrait of their handler alongside that of an unfamiliar person, they did a “double take” before approaching the face they knew.

Lead scientist Professor Jenny Morton, from Cambridge University, said: “Anyone who has spent time working with sheep will know that they are intelligent, individual animals who are able to recognise their handlers.

“We’ve shown with our study that sheep have advanced face-recognition abilities, comparable with those of humans and monkeys.”

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The team trained eight sheep to recognise the faces of four celebrities – TV journalist Fiona Bruce, American actor Jake Gyllenhaal, Harry Potter star Emma Watson and Barack Obama, from photographic images displayed on computer screens.

Placed in a special pen, each animal in turn was shown two images of human faces, one of them the “target” celebrity. A reward of cereal pellets was dispensed when a sheep crossed an infra-red beam in front of the celebrity image. If it approached the wrong image, a buzzer sounded and no reward was given.

After training, the sheep were put in the pen again to test their ability to recognise celebrity faces previously associated with food rewards. They correctly chose the learned celebrity face eight times out of 10.

When the experiment was repeated with the portraits displayed at an angle instead of face-on, the sheep’s performance dropped, but only by about 15%. This is on a par with the ability of humans to recognise partially seen faces.

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In a last test, the sheep were shown photos of their handlers interspersed randomly in place of the celebrity.

The animals typically spent two hours a day with the handlers and were very familiar with them.

Seven times out of 10, the sheep chose the face of their handler over that of a stranger, despite no prior food-association training. They also displayed peculiarly human behaviour when deciding between the two images.

Seeing a photograph of their handler for the first time, the sheep literally did a “double take”, said the researchers whose findings appear in the Royal Society journal, Open Science.

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They checked the unfamiliar face, then the handler’s image, and then the stranger’s photo again before settling on the handler’s portrait.

The scientists wrote: “The results of our study show that sheep have advanced face-recognition abilities, similar to those of humans and non-human primates.

Sheep are able to recognise familiar and unfamiliar human faces ... It would be interesting for future research to include investigation of the abilities of sheep to identify emotional expressions on human faces, possibly in combination with assessing the behaviour in response to the emotional faces, which would provide valuable information for animal welfare.”

The face recognition ability of sheep could be used to investigate Huntington’s disease and other human brain disorders that affect mental processing, said the researchers.

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The team has started studying sheep genetically modified to carry the mutation responsible for the devastating disease that affects mood, personality, memory, and muscle control.

One symptom of Huntington’s is an impaired ability to recognise facial emotion.

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