Veterinary Clinical Sciences, The Royal Veterinary College, North Mymms, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011;6(11):e26553. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026553. Epub 2011 Nov 9.
Tail-chasing is widely celebrated as normal canine behaviour in cultural references. However, all previous scientific studies of tail-chasing or 'spinning' have comprised small clinical populations of dogs with neurological, compulsive or other pathological conditions; most were ultimately euthanased. Thus, there is great disparity between scientific and public information on tail-chasing. I gathered data on the first large (n = 400), non-clinical tail-chasing population, made possible through a vast, free, online video repository, YouTube™. The demographics of this online population are described and discussed. Approximately one third of tail-chasing dogs showed clinical signs, including habitual (daily or 'all the time') or perseverative (difficult to distract) performance of the behaviour. These signs were observed across diverse breeds. Clinical signs appeared virtually unrecognised by the video owners and commenting viewers; laughter was recorded in 55% of videos, encouragement in 43%, and the commonest viewer descriptors were that the behaviour was 'funny' (46%) or 'cute' (42%). Habitual tail-chasers had 6.5+/-2.3 times the odds of being described as 'Stupid' than other dogs, and perseverative dogs were 6.8+/-2.1 times more frequently described as 'Funny' than distractible ones were. Compared with breed- and age-matched control videos, tail-chasing videos were significantly more often indoors and with a computer/television screen switched on. These findings highlight that tail-chasing is sometimes pathological, but can remain untreated, or even be encouraged, because of an assumption that it is 'normal' dog behaviour. The enormous viewing figures that YouTube™ attracts (mean+/-s.e. = 863+/-197 viewings per tail-chasing video) suggest that this perception will be further reinforced, without effective intervention.
追尾巴在文化参考中被广泛认为是正常的犬类行为。然而,以前所有关于追尾巴或“旋转”的科学研究都包括患有神经、强迫或其他病理状况的小临床犬群;大多数最终都被安乐死了。因此,科学和公众对追尾巴的信息存在很大差异。我通过一个庞大的、免费的在线视频库 YouTube 收集了第一个大型(n=400)非临床追尾巴犬群的数据。描述并讨论了这个在线群体的人口统计学特征。大约三分之一的追尾巴犬出现了临床症状,包括习惯性(每天或“一直”)或持续(难以分散注意力)表现出这种行为。这些迹象在不同的品种中都有观察到。临床症状似乎几乎没有被视频所有者和评论观众识别出来;55%的视频中记录了笑声,43%的视频中记录了鼓励,最常见的观众描述是这种行为“有趣”(46%)或“可爱”(42%)。习惯性追尾巴的狗被描述为“愚蠢”的可能性是其他狗的 6.5+/-2.3 倍,而持续追尾巴的狗被描述为“有趣”的可能性是注意力分散的狗的 6.8+/-2.1 倍。与品种和年龄匹配的对照视频相比,追尾巴的视频明显更常在室内,并且打开了电脑/电视屏幕。这些发现表明,追尾巴有时是病态的,但由于假设它是“正常”的犬类行为,它可能仍然未得到治疗,甚至可能受到鼓励。YouTube 吸引的巨大观看次数(平均值+/-标准误差=863+/-197 次每次追尾巴视频)表明,如果没有有效的干预,这种看法将进一步得到加强。