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How do dogs behave when presented with situations of different emotional valences?

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 09:55 authored by Paulo Souza, Kun GuoKun Guo, Daniel MillsDaniel Mills, Briseida Resende, Natalia Albuquerque

Dogs are good models for studying behaviour and cognition as they have complex social capabilities. In the current study, we observed how human emotional valences (positive, neutral and negative) affected aspects of dogs’ behaviour. We expected that dogs would exhibit more approaching behaviours in the positive condition and more signs of avoidance in the negative one. We analysed videos of 70 adult pet dogs of various breeds taken from an experiment in which one of two actors expressed an emotion and dogs could freely explore the environment for 30 s. Our results show that dogs exhibit differential behaviour when presented with different emotional valences. Two behaviours arose that might be linked to a reciprocal positive emotional state in dogs: tail raised between 90° and 180° and physical contact during sniffing. These behaviours are associated with an active search for information. In the positive conditions, dogs were more willing to explore the social environment and gather information from the actors.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Animals

Volume

13

Issue

6

Publisher

MDPI

ISSN

2076-2615

eISSN

2076-2615

Date Submitted

2023-04-06

Date Accepted

2023-03-09

Date of First Publication

2023-03-11

Date of Final Publication

2023-03-11

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-03-14

ePrints ID

53779

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