DeChant Mallory T, Ford Cameron, Hall Nathaniel J
Department of Animal and Food Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, United States.
Ford K9, Las Vegas, NV, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2020 May 27;7:250. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2020.00250. eCollection 2020.
Detection dogs are commonly trained and tested under conditions in which the handler or the evaluator knows the true presence or absence of a target odor. Previous research has demonstrated that when handlers are deceived and led to believe that a target odor is present, more false alerts occur. However, many detection teams operate under conditions, and it remains unclear how handler knowledge (or lack thereof) of odor presence/absence influences the dog's behavior. The aim of this study was to evaluate if knowing the number of hides placed influenced detection dog performance in an applied search environment. Professional ( = 20) and sport ( = 39) detection handler-dog teams were asked to search three separate areas (area 1 had one hide, area 2 had one hide, area 3 was blank). Handlers in the Unknown Group were not told any information on the number of hides whereas the Known Group were told there was a total of two hides in the three areas. The sport Unknown Group spent a longer duration (69.04 s) searching in area 3 compared to the sport Known Group ( = 0.004). Further, sport dogs in the Unknown group looked back to the handler more frequently. When a miss did occur, dogs of both sport and professional handlers showed an increase interest in the location of the target odor compared to a comparison location. Critically, however, there was no difference in false alerts between the Known Group and Unknown Group for sport or professional handlers. In a second experiment, fourteen professional, and thirty-nine sport teams from Experiment 1 conducted an additional search double-blind and an additional search single-blind. Both sport and professional-handler dog teams had statistically similar accuracy rate under single and double blind conditions. Overall, when handlers knew the number of hides, it led to significant changes in search behavior of the detection team but did not influence the overall false alert rates.
缉毒犬通常在训导员或评估员知晓目标气味真实存在与否的条件下进行训练和测试。先前的研究表明,当训导员被误导并误以为目标气味存在时,会出现更多误报情况。然而,许多缉毒小组是在不知情的情况下开展工作的,目前尚不清楚训导员对气味是否存在的了解(或不了解)如何影响犬的行为。本研究的目的是评估在实际搜索环境中,知晓隐藏物数量是否会影响缉毒犬的表现。专业组(n = 20)和运动组(n = 39)的训导员 - 犬组合被要求搜索三个不同区域(区域1有一个隐藏物,区域2有一个隐藏物,区域3为空)。未知组的训导员未被告知任何关于隐藏物数量的信息,而已知组的训导员被告知三个区域共有两个隐藏物。与运动已知组相比,运动未知组在区域3的搜索时间更长(69.04秒)(p = 0.004)。此外,未知组的运动犬更频繁地回头看向训导员。当确实出现漏检时,与对照位置相比,运动组和专业组训导员的犬对目标气味所在位置的兴趣都有所增加。然而,关键的是,运动组或专业组训导员的已知组和未知组在误报方面没有差异。在第二个实验中,实验1中的14个专业组和39个运动组进行了额外的双盲搜索和额外的单盲搜索。运动组和专业组训导员的犬在单盲和双盲条件下的准确率在统计学上相似。总体而言,当训导员知道隐藏物数量时,会导致缉毒小组的搜索行为发生显著变化,但不会影响总体误报率。