Perhaps not the ability to read facial expressions, specifically, but let us not overstate the case by being too specific. Cats can interpret human emotional states to some degree - but it is based more off body posture and vocal tone than upon facial expression. They aren't as good at it as dogs, and the frequency at which the cat cares about human emotional state is probably less than that you typically see in dogs. They aren't as social a species.
Anedcotal, but demonstrative - One of our cats, for example, can tell with nigh-unerring accuracy when my wife is having a nightmare. He can tell better than I can. And he responds with what, to a cat, is comforting behavior - he curls up next to her, and purrs his little heart out, and kneads. She rarely wakes up at the time, so it isn't like he's getting a payoff in attention. He can simply tell she's distressed, and does something about it.
Domestic house cats are not exactly the same as other cat species, or even feral house cats. There's a socialization step that, if undertaken when the cat is a kitten, allows them to cue into humans in ways that wild species cannot (even when given similar exposure to humans) and ferals that didn't have the exposure when young don't.
Yeah, that socialization step must be the key. I've seen stray cats that lived on their own for most of their life, that ended up being awesome house cats when adopted - but only because they had some kind of life or socialization with humans when young. A cat that never had that - forget about it. It's never going to be your pet.
I agree with you about the emotions. I wasn't trying to say that cats don't interact emotionally with people, just the reading faces part.
My wife and I have adopted a few stray cats over the years. One we named Jinxy, was a stray tom that lived around my apartment. He was friendly but very independent. Before my wife and I got married (while I was still living in the apartment alone), he'd stop by and say Hi occasionally. If I left a door open, he'd come right in and make himself at home. He'd sit on the couch, let me pet him - just generally hang out. But if I closed the doors, he'd start meowing like crazy to be let out. He did the same thing with my (soon to be) wife. But, just after my wife and I were married and she was all moved in, I had to deploy to Afghanistan. Within days of my leaving, Jinxy stopped by, my wife let him in, but for some reason he now decided to stay. My wife could close the doors and he was just fine. She was a bit of a wreck with me deployed, so Jinxy possibly sensing this, started curling up next to her head at night. After I returned he stopped doing it, and didn't even want to sleep on the bed anymore - and he still didn't mind having the doors shut. I guess to be more accurate, he adopted us, rather than we adopting him. He was a wonderfully affectionate cat.
It's so cool though how dogs can read human faces almost exactly the same as people do. The study I saw involved both Dogs and people looking at slides of objects, other animals, and human faces. When shown a picture of a persons face, Dogs and People all have a quick eye flick to the left side of the pictures face (something neither did with pictures of objects or animals). Apparently, human expressions aren't displayed equally on the left and right sides of the face - the left seems to be the more accurate or prominent representation of expressed mood/intent. Humans and Dogs both instinctively do a quick check of the left side of a human face to judge their emotional status. Something Wolves are incapable of (both inherited and learned). Also, unlike Wolves, Dogs are able to respond to pointing. Wolves are unable to learn this also. I don't know if Wolves can learn this or not, but Dogs do definitely learn and understand Human words, with some understanding a fairly large vocabulary. I've heard said that Wolves are generally "smarter" than Dogs, but I'm not sure I completely buy it. I think their intelligences are "different", but I don't completely believe that Wolves are objectively smarter.
Of course, if the dude was foolish enough to cheese off a 20 lb cat, and then lost the fight when he had a weapon, I wouldn't expect him to admit it publicly.
No doubt. Not to mention the obvious nickname he'd earn. (It's
tooooo easy, and probably not approved by Eric's Grandma anyways...so I'll just leave it unmentioned...)
Though I was only bitten once by one of my Maine Coons- which, BTW, can get into the 25-35 pound range (at 15 & 18, ours were "runts")- when I startled him in his sleep, I do share that "WTF, cat?!" experience. I wasn't kidding when I said I get bitten every time I go to my buddy's house. That cat goes from "Scwatch my eaws, pwetty pwease!" to "DIE, Foul Ear-Scratcher!!!" in a fraction of a second.
They are just the most mercurial damn animals, aren't they?!?
I had a female calico when I was a kid that was like that. Every night she'd jump up on my bed. She'd start laying on the bed around where my waist was, and curl up against me (after a quick head scratch from me). A few minutes later she'd move up by my chest. A few minutes after that she'd move up by my shoulder, and want to be petted. After a few minutes of that, she'd suddenly nip my nose (nothing hard - just a quick nip) then quickly jump to another part of the bed and settle in for the night, or jump off the bed for somewhere else. It was like a regular ritual. I have no idea what the hell she was thinking, but it was the wierdest damn thing.
Oh yeah, and those Maine Coons do get big. My aunt has one that's about 20 pounds and definitely not fat. No belly, all muscle.
But
El Mahdi <!-- END TEMPLATE: dbtech_usertag_mention -->isn't human. He's a Half-Dragon!
Naaahhhh...I just play one on the internet.
