Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Many people have seen dogs fetch, but cats like to get into the game, too. Fetching appears to combine elements of predatory and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. They are sleeker, more understated, and rarely as desperate for humans' attention as their canine counterparts. But, according to ...
You can spend years thinking you understand cats, only for one to suddenly behave like a dog and throw all your assumptions ...
Source: Tony Harrison, via Flickr. A few years ago, Elizabeth Renner posted a cute video of her cat on Twitter. Renner, a psychologist at Northumbria University, had captured her cat expectantly ...
The next time you hear "go fetch," don't assume it's for a dog. Cats like to engage in the playful behavior more than people might think. A new study from researchers at Purdue University and the ...
In news that probably won’t surprise cat owners, cats that play fetch do it on their own terms. Fetching felines tend to dictate when a fetching session begins and when it ends, a survey of over 900 ...
If you think of a game of fetch, you might picture a dog running back and forth, eagerly retrieving a ball. But a new, first-of-its-kind study in the journal Scientific Reports shows that they're not ...
A tongue-in-cheek NPR.org headline comparing the fetching abilities of cats and dogs revealed a truth known by countless cat owners: Some cats do fetch. "Cats Don't Fetch, But Know Their Names As Well ...