Pawedness in Dogs – is your dog a left-paw or a right-paw? And if so, what does it mean?
Not only would being a leftie shape your dog’s personality, it has a massive influence on whether a puppy will pass or fail Guide Dog School. Recent research by Guide Dogs NSW has indicated that dogs who are right-pawed more likely to graduate Guide Dog School than south paws!
It’s all to do with what’s called brain lateralisation. That’s where different hemispheres of the brain do different jobs. So the right brain is largely in charge of the fight-flight response – fear, anxiety. Whereas the left brain is largely in charge of jobs like eating. And because the nerves cross over, right-pawed means left brain biased, whereas left-pawed means right brain biased.
Decades of research in other species shows that right-handed animals tend to be more bold and inquisitive, while left-handed animals tend to be more fearful and cautious. So perhaps it’s not surprising the more anxious lefties did worse.
However, one of the best guides to Guide Dog success, believe it or not, it’s about which direction dog’s hair whorls in… Pioneering work in cattle found that the position and direction of the hair whorl had a large bearing on how anxious or bold cattle were.
No-one is sure exactly why, but it’s something to do with skin and brain development in the embryo, and it’s independent of paw preference. And it turned out that counter-clockwise dogs were twice as likely to graduate as the clockwise. Which astonished NSW’s Guide Dog School…

View this intriguing video by ABC Catalyst Team: