research
The Horse Keeps Still While Its Heart Races
Horses recognized wolves from silent video alone, showing faster heart rates without obvious fear behavior.
Summary
Horses recognized wolves from silent video alone, showing faster heart rates without obvious fear behavior.
Ohio State researchers found that equine threat assessment can be physiologically intense while outward behavior remains restrained. The experiment does not show how every horse responds in a real encounter.
Why it matters
Horses recognized wolves from silent video alone, showing faster heart rates without obvious fear behavior.
Limits and context
- The experiment does not show how every horse responds in a real encounter.
Key claims
Horses recognized wolves from silent video alone, showing faster heart rates without obvious fear behavior.
Qualification: The experiment does not show how every horse responds in a real encounter.
Evidence: source-2026-07-16-017
Sources
- Ohio State University via Newswise: Horses recognize predatorsOhio State University via Newswise · official announcement
Corrections
No corrections have been recorded for this story.