

Once you have successfully gotten your hamster to respond to their name you should also note that they don’t fully understand what a name is. In fact, spaced-out interaction can reset the training completely. This takes daily interactions and can go amiss if you don’t interact with them for several days during the learning process. Instead, you have to use a reward system to entice them to respond. Hamsters don’t latch on to simply being called a word or a name by their owner every day. Hamsters can learn their name but can take quite a bit of training to get your hamster to recognize their name. READ MORE: Are Hamsters Good Pets? Can They Learn Their Name?

When it comes to the short-term memory of a hamster or the learning of an insignificant piece of information, they tend to have a terrible memory. This spatial memory helps them to survive in the wild but seems to be triggered by elements such as smell and light changes. In another study, it was proven that hamsters put into a maze would remember where the food was at even after weeks of not running the maze. It should also be stated though, that many studies have pointed towards memory being used for survival. This shows that a hamster is developed enough to have a long-term memory that lasts for months to years. When there’s less sunlight the hamster would get ready to hibernate. When there was more sunlight they would begin to breed or at least get ready to. The hamster showed that they had a long-term memory good enough to recount the length of sunlight. This study targeted learning how hamsters recognized when it was both time to begin breeding and time to begin hibernation for the winter. In one study scientists work to see how hamsters identify the time of year. Hamsters’ memory is still up for debate but scientists have done studies to see how good their memory is. What's Up Doc? was also notorious for launching the careers of puppet comedians Don Austen and John Eccleston as the show's central new puppet characters, a pair of Wolves known as Bro and Bro who, amongst other dastardly deeds, would comically "devour" any celebrity guest on the losing side of the phone-in games.Hamsters can remember positionings of objects in their cage, what their name is (after training them), who their owner is and what their favorite food is. Music was also a huge part of the show and played a large role in launching the careers of music groups Take That, East 17 and Eternal.
Hamster maze vs human trap series#
The show was also responsible for the success of Batman: The Animated Series and Animaniacs on terrestrial television. Phone-in games that featured on the programme included Hugo the Troll and Joe Razz. What's Up Doc? made use of the "phone-in" game format made popular by BBC mainstays such as Going Live, using revolutionary for the time games technology to escalate the experience thanks in part to the budget and resources of Warner Bros.

in the UK of which included video games, movies, tours of their studios, and of course, their vast library of Looney Tunes animated shorts from which the "What's up Doc?" catch phrase was derived, and new animated series Animaniacs, Batman: The Animated Series and Taz-Mania. What's Up Doc? was designed to promote and feature products created by Warner Bros. The series also included a variety of characters including Simon Perry, Colin, Wooly, Billy Box, Baljit, Pasty the Worm, Mister Spanky, Naughty Torty, Gaston, Sam Sam, and Bro and Bro the Wolves. It was hosted by Andy Crane, Yvette Fielding and Pat Sharp. "What's Up Doc? was a British children's entertainment show that aired on ITV on Saturday mornings from 5 September 1992 to 29 April 1995.
