Detection dogs are widely deployed for tasks involving explosives, narcotics, medical scent detection, and wildlife conservation, yet the scientific literature evaluating their performance varies considerably in methodology. This review highlights how test design, environmental control, odor presentation, training history, and statistical approaches can profoundly influence outcomes and interpretation.
The authors emphasize that without standardized, transparent protocols, assessments of canine scent detection risk becoming inconsistent or misleading. Variability in experimental controls, handler influence, odor concentration, contamination, and trial structure may obscure true canine capability or inflate performance metrics. For organizations that rely on these data—including law enforcement, conservation agencies, and medical detection programs—the lack of methodological rigor can complicate decisions related to deployment, certification, and policy development.
Another key issue is the heterogeneity of outcome measures. Studies may report detection accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, search time, or behavior-based indicators, but these metrics are not always comparable across studies. The authors call for more standardized definitions and improved reporting practices to advance reproducibility and build cumulative knowledge.
Importantly, the review underscores the need for appropriate statistical analysis and careful control of confounding variables such as handler cueing, environmental conditions, and reward history. By outlining best practices and methodological pitfalls, the work provides a roadmap for designing scientifically robust detection dog studies that can better inform training, evaluation, and technological innovation.
As the use of detection dogs expands worldwide, developing methodological standards will be essential for improving the accuracy, reliability, and practical relevance of research in this field.
Source: Lazarowski, L., Krichbaum, S., Waggoner, L. P., et al. (2020). Methodological Considerations in Canine Olfactory Detection Research. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. Published July 17, 2020.







