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1. Wolves, dogs and humans in regular contact can mutually impact each other’s skin microbiota

2. Individual and group level personality change across the lifespan in dogs

3. The Power of Discourse: Associations between Trainers’ Speech and the Responses of Socialized Wolves and Dogs to Training

4. Pet dogs’ Behavioural Reaction to Their Caregiver’s Interactions with a Third Party: Join in or Interrupt?

5. Secure base effect in former shelter dogs and other family dogs: Strangers do not provide security in a problem-solving task.

6. Behavioural and cognitive changes in aged pet dogs: No effects of an enriched diet and lifelong training.

9. Effect of Age and Dietary Intervention on Discrimination Learning in Pet Dogs

10. Dog-Owner Attachment Is Associated With Oxytocin Receptor Gene Polymorphisms in Both Parties. A Comparative Study on Austrian and Hungarian Border Collies

11. Personality traits in companion dogs-Results from the VIDOPET.

12. The effect of domestication on post-conflict management: wolves reconcile while dogs avoid each other

13. Context and Individual Characteristics Modulate the Association between Oxytocin Receptor Gene Polymorphism and Social Behavior in Border Collies

14. Gaze-Following and Reaction to an Aversive Social Interaction Have Corresponding Associations with Variation in the OXTR Gene in Dogs but Not in Human Infants

15. Aging of Attentiveness in Border Collies and Other Pet Dog Breeds: The Protective Benefits of Lifelong Training

16. Do pet dogs (Canis familiaris) follow ostensive and non-ostensive human gaze to distant space and to objects?

17. Differences in greeting behaviour towards humans with varying levels of familiarity in hand-reared wolves (Canis lupus)

18. Dog Owners' Interaction Styles: their Components and Associations with Reactions of Pet Dogs to a Social Threat

19. Play Behavior in Wolves: Using the '50:50' Rule to Test for Egalitarian Play Styles.

20. Inhibitory Control, but Not Prolonged Object-Related Experience Appears to Affect Physical Problem-Solving Performance of Pet Dogs.

21. Training Reduces Stress in Human-Socialised Wolves to the Same Degree as in Dogs.

22. The effect of domestication on inhibitory control: wolves and dogs compared.

23. Wolves are better imitators of conspecifics than dogs.

24. The predictive value of early behavioural assessments in pet dogs--a longitudinal study from neonates to adults.

25. Social learning from humans or conspecifics: differences and similarities between wolves and dogs

26. Development of gaze following abilities in wolves (Canis lupus).

27. Dogs' expectation about signalers' body size by virtue of their growls.

28. Explaining dog wolf differences in utilizing human pointing gestures: selection for synergistic shifts in the development of some social skills.

30. Going back to ‘basics’: Harlow’s learning set task with wolves and dogs

31. Selective responding to human ostensive communication is an early developing capacity of domestic dogs

32. Relationship quality affects social stress buffering in dogs and wolves

33. Partial rewarding during clicker training does not improve naïve dogs’ learning speed and induces a pessimistic-like affective state

34. Dogs wait longer for better rewards than wolves in a delay of gratification task: but why?

35. How to improve data quality in dog eye tracking

36. Comparing the tractability of young hand-raised wolves (Canis lupus) and dogs (Canis familiaris)

37. Behavioural and cognitive changes in aged pet dogs: No effects of an enriched diet and lifelong training

38. Cognitive Aging in Dogs

39. Integrating social ecology in explanations of wolf–dog behavioral differences

40. DNA methylation patterns of behavior-related gene promoter regions dissect the gray wolf from domestic dog breeds

41. Editorial: Oxytocin and Social Behaviour in Dogs and Other (Self-)Domesticated Species: Methodological Caveats and Promising Perspectives

42. Wolves lead and dogs follow, but they both cooperate with humans

43. Gaze-Following and Reaction to an Aversive Social Interaction Have Corresponding Associations with Variation in the OXTR Gene in Dogs but Not in Human Infants

44. The Other End of the Leash: An Experimental Test to Analyze How Owners Interact with Their Pet Dogs

45. Importance of a species’ socioecology: Wolves outperform dogs in a conspecific cooperation task

46. The effects of domestication and ontogeny on cognition in dogs and wolves

47. Do pet dogs (

48. Individual and group level trajectories of behavioural development in Border collies

49. Correction: Personality traits in companion dogs—Results from the VIDOPET

50. Differences in greeting behaviour towards humans with varying levels of familiarity in hand-reared wolves (Canis lupus)

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