Inside of a Dog_ What Dogs See, Smell, and Know - Alexandra Horowitz [124]
Jacob, S., and M. K. McClintock. 2000. Psychological state and mood effects of steroidal chemosignals in women and men. Hormones and Behavior, 37, 57–78.
McClintock, M. K. 1971. Menstrual synchrony and suppression. Nature, 229, 244–245.
on moist noses:
Mason, R. T., M. P. LeMaster, and D. Muller-Schwarze. 2005. Chemical signals in vertebrates, Volume 10. New York: Springer.
on smelling us:
Lindsay, 2000.
on distinguishing twins by scent:
Hepper, P. G. 1988. The discrimination of human odor by the dog. Perception, 17, 549–554.
on bloodhounds:
Lindsay, 2000.
Sommerville and Broom, 1998. Watson, 2000.
on using footsteps to detect trail:
Hepper, P. G, and D. L. Wells. 2005. How many footsteps do dogs need to determine the direction of an odour trail? Chemical Senses, 30, 291–298.
Syrotuck, W. G. 1972. Scent and the scenting dog. Mechanicsburg, PA: Barkleigh Productions.
on the smell of tuberculosis:
Wright, 1982.
on the smell of disease:
Drobnick, 2006. Syrotuck, 1972.
on cancer detection:
a partial list of the many studies:
McCulloch, M., T. Jezierski, M. Broffman, A. Hubbard, K. Turner, and T. Janecki. 2006. Diagnostic accuracy of canine scent detection in early-and late-stage lung and breast cancers. Integrative Cancer Therapies, 5,30–39.
Williams, H., and A. Pembroke. 1989. Sniffer dogs in the melanoma clinic? Lancet, 1, 734.
Willis, C. M., S. M. Church, C. M. Guest, W. A. Cook, N. McCarthy, A. J. Bransbury, M. R. T. Church, and J. C. T. Church. 2004. Olfactory detection of bladder cancer by dogs: Proof of principle study. British Medical Journal, 329, 712–716.
on epileptic seizure detection:
Dalziel, D. J., B. M. Uthman, S. P. McGorray, and R. L. Reep. 2003. Seizure-alert dogs: A review and preliminary study. Seizure, 12, 115–120.
Doherty, M. J., and A. M. Haltiner. 2007. Wag the dog: Skepticism on seizure alert canines. Neurology, 68, 309.
Kirton, A., E. Wirrell, J. Zhang, and L. Hamiwka. 2004. Seizure-alerting and -response behaviors in dogs living with epileptic children. Neurology, 62, 2303–2305.
on urine marking:
Lindsay, 2005.
Lorenz, K. 1954. Man meets dog. London: Methuen.
on bladders' single use:
Sapolsky, R. M. 2004. Why zebras don't get ulcers. New York: Henry Holt & Company.
on anal sacs:
Harrington and Asa, 2003.
Natynczuk, S., J. W. S. Bradshaw, and D. W. Macdonald. 1989. Chemical constituents of the anal sacs of domestic dogs. Biochemical Systematics and Ecology, 17, 83–87.
on anal sacs and vets:
McGreevy, P. (personal communication).
on scratching the ground after marking:
Bekoff, M. 1979. Ground scratching by male domestic dogs: A composite signal. Journal of Mammalogy, 60, 847–848.
on antibiotics and smell:
Attributed to John Bradshaw by Coghlan, A. September 23, 2006. Animal welfare: See things from their perspective. NewScientist.com.
on the Manhattan grid:
Margolies, E. 2006. Vagueness gridlocked: A map of the smells of New York. In J. Drobnick, ed., The smell culture reader (pp. 107–117). New York: Berg.
on brambish and brunky:
These words were coined by Calvin and Hobbes artist Bill Watterson, and put in the mouth of his cartoon tiger Hobbes.
"brilliant smell of water …":
Chesterton, G. K. 2004. "The song of the quoodle," in The collected works of G. K. Chesterton. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, p. 556. (In this same poem he commented on the relative "noselessness" of man.)
MUTE
"blank bewilderment":
Woolf, V. 1933. Flush: A biography. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, p. 44.
"uncommunicating muteness":
Lamb, C. 1915. Essays of Elia. London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., p. 53.
on the dog's hearing range:
Harrington and Asa, 2003.
on the "Mosquito" teenager repellent:
Vitello, P. June 12, 2006. "A ring tone meant to fall on deaf ears." The New York Times.
on alarm clocks:
Bodanis, D. 1986. The secret house: 24 hours in the strange and unexpected world in which we spend our nights