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雄性老鼠和奶牛能感知人类的情绪化学信号:一项初步研究。

Male mice and cows perceive human emotional chemosignals: a preliminary study.

机构信息

Centre des Sciences du Goût et de L'Alimentation, UMR6265 CNRS, Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, INRAE, Agrosup Dijon, Dijon, France.

AgroSup Dijon, Unité Pédagogique de Productions Animales, Dijon, France.

出版信息

Anim Cogn. 2021 Nov;24(6):1205-1214. doi: 10.1007/s10071-021-01511-6. Epub 2021 Apr 11.

Abstract

Olfactory cues of individuals of the same species or from different species may induce changes in behaviors and physiological reactions in mammals. However, there are few studies on the influence of human odor on animal behavior and welfare, especially those of rodents and farm animals. The present study aimed to investigate whether the odor of a stressed human (in sweat) would modify the behavior of mice and cows. We hypothesized that laboratory and farm animals can perceive human emotions though olfactory cues and that human emotional chemosignals can modify their behavioral reactions and welfare. Two odors of human axillary sweat were collected from engineering students (n = 25, 14 females and 11 males; 21.1 ± 0.7 years old, range: 19-23 years old): a "stress" odor collected after an exam and a "non-stress" odor collected after a standard class. Two experiments were then conducted to test the discrimination of these two odors by male mice (n = 20) under standard conditions and by cows (n = 10) under farm conditions. During the experiments, the behavioral responses of the animals to both odors (through a dispenser for the mice and a bucket for the cows) were observed. The mice produced significantly (p = 0.004) more fecal pellets with the stress odor dispenser than with the non-stress-odor dispenser. The cows spent significantly (p = 0.04) more time smelling the non-stress-odor bucket than control. For both species, the other behaviors observed did not differ significantly between the odors. Mice and cows seemed to perceive and react to stressful human chemosignals. Mice showed physiological reactions that indicated stress in response to the stress odor of humans, while cows showed preference reactions in response to the non-stress odor of humans. This preliminary study showed that laboratory and farm animals, such as male mice and cows, seemed to discriminate certain odors emitted by humans that were likely related to different emotions. Animals may recognize stressful human chemosignals, associate these signals with negative husbandry practices or human-animal relationships, and consequently modify their behavior.

摘要

同种或不同种个体的嗅觉线索可能会引起哺乳动物行为和生理反应的变化。然而,关于人类气味对动物行为和福利的影响的研究很少,特别是关于啮齿动物和农场动物的研究。本研究旨在探讨人类(汗液中的)应激气味是否会改变老鼠和奶牛的行为。我们假设实验室和农场动物可以通过嗅觉线索感知人类的情绪,并且人类的情绪化学信号可以改变它们的行为反应和福利。从工科学生身上采集了两种腋窝汗液气味(n = 25,14 名女性,11 名男性;21.1 ± 0.7 岁,范围:19-23 岁):一种是考试后采集的“应激”气味,另一种是标准课后采集的“非应激”气味。然后进行了两项实验,以测试标准条件下雄性老鼠(n = 20)和农场条件下奶牛(n = 10)对这两种气味的辨别能力。在实验中,观察了动物对两种气味(通过老鼠的分配器和奶牛的桶)的行为反应。老鼠在应激气味分配器中产生的粪便明显多于非应激气味分配器(p = 0.004)。奶牛在非应激气味桶中闻的时间明显多于对照组(p = 0.04)。对于这两种物种,观察到的其他行为在气味之间没有显著差异。老鼠和奶牛似乎能够感知和对人类应激化学信号做出反应。老鼠对人类的应激气味表现出生理反应,表明它们处于应激状态,而奶牛对人类的非应激气味表现出偏好反应。这项初步研究表明,实验室和农场动物,如雄性老鼠和奶牛,似乎可以区分人类发出的某些可能与不同情绪有关的气味。动物可能会识别出有压力的人类化学信号,将这些信号与负面的养殖实践或人-动物关系联系起来,并因此改变它们的行为。

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