Horses Can Read Human Facial Expressions (2024)

Humans have been living and working with horses for more than 5,000 years, since the first domesticated equines had their teeth worn down by primitive bridles in northern Kazakhstan. Hands could not have built modern civilization without the help of hooves—to haul ploughs, pull carriages, march soldiers into battle, and carry messages of love and war across hundreds of otherwise-insurmountable miles.

An unlikely pairing of wily predator and one-ton prey, humans and horses have managed to successfully communicate across the species barrier because we share a language: emotion. Experienced riders and trainers can learn to read the subtle moods of individual horses according to wisdom passed down from one horseman to the next, but also from years of trial-and-error. I suffered many bruised toes and nipped fingers before I could detect a curious swivel of the ears, irritated flick of the tail, or concerned crinkle above a long-lashed eye.

Horses can read human emotions, too, often in uncannily accurate ways; alerting us to our sadness or nervousness, sometimes before we’ve even consciously registered it. As Herman Melville wrote in Redburn, "No philosophers so thoroughly comprehend us as dogs and horses."

Today’s domesticated horse, Equus caballus, is a tamer version of the snorting, shaggy beast who once roamed the plains in the Ice Age; selectively bred over generations for agility and a human-friendly temperament. But horses’ ability to form complex social relationships stems from an older evolutionary legacy, of living in close-knit bands of five to 10. Within these bands, foals, fillies, stallions, and mares—who were the observant matriarchs, despite the males’ eye-catching flashy necks and noisy displays, as Wendy Williams notes in The Horse—all formed close emotional partnerships. Now, humans are part of the herd: Domestic horses respond to the tiniest change in tone of voice, quality of touch, or stiffness of their rider’s body.

The equine ability to read human emotion through sound and touch is exquisite. But horses can also read the expression on a person’s face—as a Biology Letters paper earlier this month confirmed for the first time. This sophisticated capacity has only ever previously been demonstrated in dogs—and even further disproves the myth (that I believed until now, despite riding for 15 years) that horses have bad eyesight. While horses can’t see color, and have a blind spot directly in front of them as a result of eyes positioned on the side of their head, their vision is actually more acute than domestic cats’ or dogs’.

A University of Sussex research team, led by Amy Smith alongside the veteran animal-behavior scientist Karen McComb, showed a group of 28 horses large photographs of man’s face making either a positive (smiling) or negative (angry, brows furrowed) emotional expression. The results showed that horses were able to automatically distinguish between the two expressions, and what they meant.

The horses tended to look at the angry faces out of their left eye—a response well-documented in horses and in dogs, indicating that an animal is engaging the right hemisphere of its brain where novel and fear-provoking stimuli are processed. The horses’ heart rates also rose more quickly when they were presented with the angry face. Being able to tell a smiling handler from an angry one is a useful skill for a domestic horse—being approached by a frown rarely results in happy consequences.

The authors speculated that horses may simply have been applying an ancestral ability to read the facial expressions of their own species “onto a morphologically different species,” in this case, humans. These same University of Sussex scientists found last year that horses have 17 distinct facial expressions—more than dogs’ 16, or chimpanzees’ 14—many of which are similar to humans’ 27 facial movements, like creased brows or eyes widened in fear. (So far, this method of coding facial expressions hasn’t been applied to wild animals, and those that aren’t part of humans’ evolutionary lineage.)

However, since the horses tested in this particular study came from riding schools, where they interact with humans all day every day, their face-reading ability may also have been learned within their lifetime. Previous research has demonstrated that familiarity was a significant factor in dog’s ability to recognize human expressions—they performed better when faced with their owners than with a stranger.

While these latest findings probably come as no surprise to those who work with horses on a daily basis, they are one more piece in the increasingly complex picture of the emotional language humans share with other species. Horses’ ability to read faces perhaps also refines the explanation for horses’ therapeutic and even spiritual effects on humans, documented in our art and stories since the first etchings on cave walls.

They may speak in humming sighs or twitches of whiskered lips instead of words, but it’s increasingly clear that horses are highly emotionally attuned—and not all that different from the animals they carry on their backs.

Lauren Cassani Davis is a former editorial fellow at The Atlantic.

Horses Can Read Human Facial Expressions (2024)

FAQs

Horses Can Read Human Facial Expressions? ›

These results show that horses are able to discriminate facial and vocal expressions of joy and sadness and may form cross-modal representations of these emotions; they also are more attracted to joyful faces than to sad faces and seem to be more aroused by a joyful voice than a sad voice.

Can horses recognize human facial expressions? ›

These results show that horses are able to discriminate facial and vocal expressions of joy and sadness and may form cross-modal representations of these emotions; they also are more attracted to joyful faces than to sad faces and seem to be more aroused by a joyful voice than a sad voice.

What animals can read human facial expressions? ›

Several scientific studies have found that dogs can recognize individual humans and that they can distinguish between basic facial expressions, such as anger or happiness, just by facial features.

How many face expressions can a horse make? ›

Let's face it: When it comes to expressions, a horse is no one-trick pony. Recent findings have revealed that our equine friends use 17 discrete facial movements to communicate. That's 10 fewer than humans—but one more than dogs and four more than chimpanzees.

How horses discriminate between human facial and vocal expressions of sadness and joy? ›

A new study shows that horses can differentiate between expressions of joy and sadness displayed by humans through facial movements or voice tones. Horses were more attracted by the facial expressions of joy than sadness and seemed more excited by the joyful voices.

Why do horses look at you? ›

What does it mean when a horse stares at you? Your horse may gaze at you while relaxed to connect with you or to see if you've brought tasty treats. On the other hand, if your horse is staring at you with high alert signs like a raised head and flared nostrils, she might be spooked by you or something you're wearing.

Do horses like their face petted? ›

Horses are very social animals, so they enjoy having their faces stroked or scratched. They also have a great sense of smell, so if you rub the area around their eyes, they will appreciate it!

Do horses feel empathy for humans? ›

One of the key factors behind a horse's ability to understand human emotions lies in their exceptional social intelligence. Horses are herd animals with complex social structures, and as such, they possess a natural inclination to empathize and bond with others, including humans.

Do horses smile when happy? ›

Do horses smile? They sure do. Recent study results suggest horses have specific facial expressions that reveal positive emotions akin to “happiness,” in a sense. And while those expressions might not be the cheesy cartoon grin or the human ear-to-ear, they do represent the “equine happy face.”

Do horses recognize words? ›

They may not understand the intricacies of the English language (or any human language for that matter), but they're adept at picking up on cues. The emphasis isn't necessarily on the words but the way they're conveyed. A study elaborates how horses understand human gestures and even our gaze!

What makes a horse unhappy? ›

Electricity, whether in the form of electric fence, stray electricity around fences or waterers, or the sound of machinery may all affect horses, even those that are typically calm. Human-horse interaction, when changed, can negatively affect how a horse feels.

Why do horses make us happy? ›

Connecting with horses (not just riding; grooming or just even being around them) can cause our brains to release positive neurotransmitters. The three big ones that are triggered are: oxytocin (the love hormone), serotonin and dopamine, which are responsible for the happy feelings we get.

How do horses react to fear? ›

While most horses flee from a scary thing, more dominant or aggressive horses may stay and challenge the threat. Mares protecting their foals will often stomp to warn dogs or people not to approach her foal. Stomping can quickly lead to pawing and striking.

Can horses sense if you're a good person? ›

Just as humans have difficulty telling if another human is truly a good person, horses can't make that judgment…they can't read your soul. But they are very empathic and can read your mood and attitude and whether your actions toward them are good, and they have long memories.

Do horses have facial recognition? ›

The second demonstrated that horses can both learn to differentiate faces of unknown people from a photograph and also spontaneously identify the photograph of a person they had encountered in real-life, despite not having seen that person for 6 months (Lansade et al., 2020).

Can horses sense human emotions sad? ›

"Overall, our study shows that horses can differentiate audible and visual signals of human joy and sadness, and associate the corresponding vocal and facial expressions.

Do horses recognize their humans? ›

Many studies suggest that horses do remember their owners similarly to the way they remember other horses. Past experiences, memories, and sounds remind horses of people, other animals, and situations—understanding how your horse's memory and emotions work will strengthen your relationship and your time together.

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