Here’s the article abstract, and the link to the article
- judisedwards
- Nov 15
- 2 min read
I spoke about this article to our group today, the actual article is a deep read so I’ve posted the link if you want to dig in. These are detection canines (drugs, bombs), not tracking dogs, although some studies on tracking are mentioned in the full article.
Detection canines are utilized worldwide in some of the most challenging field conditions for the detection of
narcotics, explosives, and other targets. Much remains unknown, however, how these challenging conditions
impact detection canine performance. Anecdotal evidence suggests that detection dogs require a “start-up”
period – a short duration of time working – before performing optimally. These dogs commonly rest in climate-
controlled settings (such as in a climate-controlled vehicle) and quickly transition to searches in contrasting
conditions, which may exacerbate the issue. Accordingly, this study sought to quantify the magnitude and
duration of the start-up period, and to identify any further effects on performance due to rapid transitions into
extreme temperature/humidity conditions. The detection threshold of seven dogs was established for methyl
benzoate (an odor simulant of illicit cocaine) under standard conditions using an air dilution olfactometer. A
series of evaluations were then conducted to determine changes in this threshold when the dogs were rapidly
transitioned from standard conditions to one of six temperature/humidity conditions - hot-humid, warm-humid,
hot-dry, standard, cold-dry and cold-humid. Temperatures ranged from 0 to 40 ºC and relative humidity ranged
from <40 % to >85 %. Changes in detection threshold were measured via a series of three “probes” of six trials,
with a 2 min inter-probe interval to habituate to environmental conditions. Probes started at the dogs’ estimated
threshold and decreased in concentration based on correct performance. Overall, dogs showed substantial
decrements in the hot-humid condition followed by moderate decrements in hot-dry and warm-humid conditions.
Cold conditions did not produce statistically significant decrements. In addition, the data indicate that a
start-up period does exist when canines transition from a state of rest directly into a search assignment. The
duration of this start-up period was initially measured to be several minutes long; but after the first series of
testing (approximately a couple months of training/testing), the dogs only exhibited a decrement in performance
on the first trial of a session. Overall, the results suggest that environmental conditions and a brief “start-up”
effect should be considered as important variables that can impact detection canine performance.
Interesting! So I infer from this synopsis that it might be a good idea to get your dog out of the car a few minutes ahead of running the track & maybe doing a couple article indications by the car, let him sniff around the environment, etc., especially in hot, humid weather