Dipartimento di Fisiopatologia Medico-Chirurgica e dei Trapianti, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Dipartimento di Medicina e Chirurgia, Università degli Studi di Parma, Parma, Italy.
PLoS One. 2018 Apr 18;13(4):e0194577. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194577. eCollection 2018.
While dog owners ascribe different emotions to their pets, including jealousy, research on secondary emotions in nonhuman animals is very limited and, so far, only one study has investigated jealousy in dogs (Canis familiaris). This work explores jealousy in dogs one step further. We conducted two studies adapting a procedure devised to assess jealousy in human infants. In each study 36 adult dogs were exposed to a situation in which their owner and a stranger ignored them while directing positive attention towards three different objects: a book, a puppet and a fake dog (Study 1: furry; Study 2: plastic). Overall, the results of both studies do not provide evidence that the behavioral responses of our dogs were triggered by jealousy: we did not find a clear indication that the fake dogs were perceived as real social rivals, neither the furry nor the plastic one. Indeed, dogs exhibited a higher interest (i.e. look at, interact with) towards the fake dogs, but differences in the behavior towards the fake dog and the puppet only emerged in Study 2. In addition, many of the behaviors (protest, stress, attention seeking, aggression) that are considered distinctive features of jealousy were not expressed or were expressed to a limited extent, revealing that dogs did not actively try to regain their owner's attention or interfere with the interaction between the owner and the faux rival. Finally, a differentiated response towards the attachment figure (the owner) and the unfamiliar person (the stranger) did not emerge. Differently from what reported in human infants, dogs' behavior towards the attachment figure and the stranger interacting with the potential competitor (in this case, the fake dog) did not significantly differ: in both studies dogs paid attention to the owner and the stranger manipulating the fake dog to the same extent. In conclusion, we do not exclude that dogs could possess a rudimentary form of jealousy, but we suggest that research on this topic should require the use of a real social interloper (conspecific or human) and more naturalistic procedures.
当狗主人将不同的情绪归因于他们的宠物时,包括嫉妒,对非人类动物的次生情绪的研究非常有限,到目前为止,只有一项研究调查了狗的嫉妒(犬科动物)。这项工作进一步探讨了狗的嫉妒。我们通过改编一种评估人类婴儿嫉妒的程序来进行了两项研究。在每一项研究中,36 只成年狗都被暴露在一种情况下,主人和一个陌生人忽视了它们,而将积极的注意力转向三个不同的物体:一本书、一个木偶和一个假狗(研究 1:毛茸茸的;研究 2:塑料的)。总的来说,这两项研究的结果都没有提供证据表明我们的狗的行为反应是由嫉妒引起的:我们没有发现明确的迹象表明假狗被视为真正的社交对手,无论是毛茸茸的还是塑料的。事实上,狗对假狗表现出更高的兴趣(即看、互动),但只有在研究 2 中,狗对假狗和木偶的行为才表现出差异。此外,许多被认为是嫉妒特征的行为(抗议、压力、寻求关注、攻击)没有表现出来,或者表现得很有限,这表明狗并没有积极试图重新获得主人的关注,也没有干扰主人和假对手之间的互动。最后,没有出现对依恋对象(主人)和陌生的互动者(陌生人)的不同反应。与人类婴儿报告的情况不同,狗对依恋对象和与潜在竞争对手(在这种情况下,是假狗)互动的陌生者的行为没有显著差异:在两项研究中,狗对主人和操纵假狗的陌生人的关注程度相同。总之,我们不排除狗可能具有一种基本形式的嫉妒,但我们建议,应该使用真正的社交干扰者(同类或人类)和更自然的程序来进行关于这一主题的研究。