Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Strada Provinciale per Casamassima, km 3, 70010 Bari, Italy.
Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC), University of Trento, Corso Bettini 31, 38068 Rovereto, Italy.
Curr Biol. 2013 Nov 18;23(22):2279-2282. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.09.027. Epub 2013 Oct 31.
Left-right asymmetries in behavior associated with asymmetries in the brain are widespread in the animal kingdom, and the hypothesis has been put forward that they may be linked to animals' social behavior. Dogs show asymmetric tail-wagging responses to different emotive stimuli-the outcome of different activation of left and right brain structures controlling tail movements to the right and left side of the body. A crucial question, however, is whether or not dogs detect this asymmetry. Here we report that dogs looking at moving video images of conspecifics exhibiting prevalent left- or right-asymmetric tail wagging showed higher cardiac activity and higher scores of anxious behavior when observing left- rather than right-biased tail wagging. The finding that dogs are sensitive to the asymmetric tail expressions of other dogs supports the hypothesis of a link between brain asymmetry and social behavior and may prove useful to canine animal welfare theory and practice.
动物王国中广泛存在与大脑不对称相关的行为左右不对称现象,有人提出假设,认为这种不对称可能与动物的社交行为有关。狗对不同情绪刺激会表现出不对称的摇尾反应,这是控制尾巴向身体左右两侧运动的左右大脑结构不同激活的结果。然而,一个关键问题是狗是否能察觉到这种不对称。在这里,我们报告说,当狗观看同类表现出明显的左或右偏态摇尾的移动视频图像时,观察到左偏摇尾而非右偏摇尾时,它们的心脏活动会更高,焦虑行为的评分也会更高。狗对其他狗的不对称摇尾表现敏感的发现支持了大脑不对称与社交行为之间存在联系的假设,这可能对犬类动物福利理论和实践有用。