Hargrave Stephanie H, Keyser Amber J, Kristal Emma, Alexander Gene E, Block Theadora A, Bray Emily E, Douglas Laura E L C, Kennedy Brenda S, Promislow Daniel E L, Raichlen David A, MacLean Evan L
Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
bioRxiv. 2025 Jul 2:2025.06.30.662397. doi: 10.1101/2025.06.30.662397.
Companion dogs have emerged as a valuable model in the study of cognitive aging, but assessments of cognitive function in large, diverse, and geographically distributed samples of dogs are challenging to obtain. We developed two novel functional assessments of short-term spatial memory that were administered by community science participants in a sample of 6,753 dogs through the Dog Aging Project. We compared data generated by community scientists to those gathered by research professionals, estimated relationships between age and task performance, and tested the hypothesis that associations between age and cognitive performance vary by dog body mass, as a proxy for expected lifespan. Community scientists generated similar data to research professionals and both cognitive tasks were sensitive to age-related deficits, beginning in midlife. Relationships between age and cognitive function were highly similar across small and large dogs and, for both tasks, comparison of models with and without an interaction between age and body mass yielded decisive evidence for the model without the interaction. Large dogs exhibit accelerated aging across many traits, and so the lack of evidence for accelerated cognitive aging raises the possibility that their large size confers a neuroprotective advantage. We consider possible mechanisms underlying this effect and address how experimental studies of dog cognition using community science methods can support future research on mechanisms of brain and cognitive aging.
伴侣犬已成为认知衰老研究中的一种重要模型,但要在大规模、多样化且分布于不同地理位置的犬类样本中获取认知功能评估数据颇具挑战。我们开发了两种新颖的短期空间记忆功能评估方法,通过犬类衰老项目,由社区科学参与者对6753只犬进行测试。我们将社区科学家收集的数据与研究专业人员收集的数据进行比较,估计年龄与任务表现之间的关系,并检验了这样一个假设:年龄与认知表现之间的关联会因犬的体重而有所不同,体重可作为预期寿命的一个指标。社区科学家得出的数据与研究专业人员的数据相似,并且两项认知任务对与年龄相关的缺陷都很敏感,这种缺陷从中年就开始出现。无论大狗还是小狗,年龄与认知功能之间的关系都高度相似,而且对于这两项任务,比较有年龄与体重交互项和没有交互项的模型,结果为没有交互项的模型提供了决定性证据。大型犬在许多特征上都表现出加速衰老,因此缺乏加速认知衰老的证据增加了一种可能性,即它们的大体型赋予了神经保护优势。我们考虑了这种效应背后可能的机制,并探讨了利用社区科学方法进行犬类认知实验研究如何能够支持未来关于大脑和认知衰老机制的研究。