Baa-rack! Clever sheep recognize human faces from photos
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Sheep have learned to recognize Barack Obama's face after being shown his photograph several times, according to a study published Wednesday which suggests the definitive farm animal may be smarter than we think.
The former US president was one of four celebrities used in a test of the woolly creatures' facial recognition skills, along with Harry Potter actress Emma Watson, British TV host Fiona Bruce and American actor Jake Gyllenhaal.
"We chose these people because there were lots of images of each person available online, both front-on and taken at different angles," study co-author Jennifer Morton of the University of Cambridge told AFP.
"We also chose them because we were sure that our sheep had never met them in person!"
Morton and a team trained eight sheep to recognize the famous faces from a frontal photo of each of them.
Every time an animal picked the celebrity face instead of a different image on a second screen, it would get a food reward.
The sheep learnt to recognize Barack Obama after being shown his photo a few dozen times. /Gif via University of Cambridge

The sheep learnt to recognize Barack Obama after being shown his photo a few dozen times. /Gif via University of Cambridge

The sheep would nuzzle up close to their chosen screen, where they would trigger an infrared sensor releasing a treat, if they had chosen correctly.
In subsequent tests, the sheep chose the celebrity face eight times out of every ten, the research team said.
They then challenged the animals again, this time by showing them a picture of the same celebrity, but using a new photo of their face tilted at an angle.
The sheep's accuracy dipped to about 66 percent - "a magnitude similar to that seen when humans perform this task," - the team reported in the journal Royal Society Open Science.
Photo via Royal Society Open Science 2017

Photo via Royal Society Open Science 2017

Underestimated smarts
The animal's "ability to learn to recognize a person from a two-dimensional photograph was surprising, since this requires complex brain processing," said Morton.
In a fifth and final task, the sheep were shown a photograph of their day-to-day handler – who they know well but have never seen a picture of – next to that of an unknown person.
After some initial confusion, the animals picked the handler's picture in 72 percent of cases.
"Humans do tend to underestimate the ability of sheep," Morton said, "This current study adds an interesting new ability to the surprising wide repertoire of behavior of sheep."
Facial recognition is a critical social skill in humans and we are able to identify a known person within milliseconds of seeing them.
Many other animals are known to recognize the faces among their own species, while some – including macaques, horses, dogs, mockingbirds, and sheep – can identify individuals from other species too.
This new evidence suggests that sheep can process information about a human face without requiring a 3D "real person", said Morton.
Researchers have trained sheep to recognize famous faces. /AFP Photo

Researchers have trained sheep to recognize famous faces. /AFP Photo

The study feeds into ongoing research on treating neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's, in which face perception can be impaired.
A sheep "model" of Huntington's disease has been bred, displaying similar brain and social changes as witnessed in human patients.
"This face recognition task will allow us to test whether or not sheep carrying the Huntington's disease gene mutation are impaired in their ability to think and reason," Morton explained.
"If this is the case, we can use the test to measure the beneficial effect of new treatments."
Source(s): AFP