Catawba College student Hope Woods "went to the dogs" this summer, literally. The rising senior from Burlington, Conn., successfully landed a very competitive internship at Yale University's Canine Cognition Center where she joined eight other interns who all studied dog thinking.
Woods, who is pursuing a double major in biology and psychology, with minors in environmental science and honors, at Catawba, shares that the Canine Cognition Center is a research facility of Yale's Psychology Department that studies "both the social and cognitive psychology of canines, such as how they perceive their environment, solve problems, and make decisions." Participants in the Center, she says, "are domesticated, family dogs whose guardians participate as volunteers."
Although the interns have to "be professional with the dogs," Woods confides, "once we bring them back into the lobby we are allowed to give them attention and love on them (with their guardian's permission)."
"During a visit, each dog will participate in two to three studies depending on their track and will come in multiple times throughout a semester, completing the docket of studies," Woods continues.
"The lab is quite funny; on their first visit, the dogs get an acceptance letter to Yale, and on each subsequent visit, they get certificates for completing their freshman, sophomore, junior, senior year, and so on. The highest academic level a dog has been awarded so far is a Master's degree. As well, along the way, they get tapped into Scruff and Bones, take the doGRE, study abroad, get inducted into Paw Beta Kappa, and are awarded the Fulbark Fellowship, to name a few. The guardians love each award!"
Each intern in the Canine Cognition Center has a project that is considered their own, but they also act as actors or camera operators for various other studies. Woods' project involved conducting "research assessing if canines detect and develop a preference for competence in humans." She explains her project thusly:
"Borrowed from infant research in social psychology, it is known that canines detect and prefer warm human companions, but there has not been much research conducted on the topic of competence. From an evolutionary perspective, it would be in their best interest to detect competence, as through the domestication process, canines have come to rely on humans much more than their wild counterparts, such as dingoes, and competent humans secure more resources and provide safety. Also, as an actor in a separate study, we examined if canines assume efficiency in human actions. As each project is an extension of ongoing research, at the start of the summer, we memorized scripts and the precise actions/movements associated with the studies.
"Over the course of the summer, I also completed a dependent measure looking-time coding project of the rhesus macaques of Cayo Santiago, a component of a graduate student's ongoing research," Woods says, adding, "I attended weekly laboratory meetings reviewing and discussing developments in comparative cognition and participating in brainstorming sessions. Our week consisted of two-three days of running participants, a process commonly compared to performing a theatre show, with about eight hours of performances going from dog to dog. Our additional days were assigned for coding - about 10 hours a week - lab meetings, and professional development."
Woods and her fellow interns also had the chance to attend bi-weekly professional development workshops outlining the pros and cons of attending graduate school, preparing them for the application process, and describing the daily life of a graduate student from those who are in the thick of the program. As a component of these professional development workshops, Woods had the opportunity to draft a personal statement for graduate school applications and receive feedback from her peers and Yale professors.
"I was torn between the fields of comparative cognition and social psychology as possible career paths," Woods confides. "With previous exposure to conducting research in social psychology, I was interested in dipping my feet into another area of psychology to compare my experiences and gain exposure to comparative research topics and techniques. Accepting a summer internship with the Canine Cognition Center at Yale University broadened my practical research knowledge and also confirmed my future aspirations.
"The field of comparative cognition is greatly tied with developmental psychology; as the name suggests, much research with canines and nonhuman primates are comparative studies to infants and adolescent children. I often found my interests floating back to the realm of social psychology when reading academic articles and during brainstorming sessions.
"I am now confident that I would like to pursue a graduate degree in the field of social and personality psychology, an insight I would not have confirmed if it were not for this internship experience.
"At the start of this summer internship," she explains, "I had plans to attend graduate school, but was not confident in an academic field and only had a foundational understanding of what it means to be a graduate student. As the internship has drawn to a close, I can now say with certainty that I would like to pursue a graduate degree in social and personality psychology, with an emphasis in behavioral endocrinology, and I have my eye on four specific programs. This summer internship has provided clarity and prepared me to pursue these interests."
In addition to Woods, eight other interns spent their summer at the Canine Cognition Center. They included a graduate of Franklin and Marshall University and the University of Florida, seniors from the University of Florida, the University of Virginia, Wesleyan University, and Pomona College, along with two sophomores from Wellesley College and Yale University.
Dr. Sheila Brownlow, Woods' academic advisor, is proud of Woods for both landing the prestigious summer internship and the research work she completed there. She says of Woods, "She's a terrific writer and has done a wonderful job telling me what she's been up to and making me laugh (and amazing me). She is one of our best."
At Catawba, Woods is a member of Alpha Chi National Honor Society, serves as president of Phi Epsilon Honor Society and Psi Chi Honor Society, and works in the College Writing Center as a tutor.