Karl Sabrina, Anderle Kristina, Völter Christoph J, Virányi Zsófia
Comparative Cognition, Messerli Research Institute, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Medical University of Vienna, University of Vienna, 1210 Vienna, Austria.
Animals (Basel). 2022 Jun 18;12(12):1574. doi: 10.3390/ani12121574.
Pet dogs are promising candidates to study attachment-related and potentially jealousy-like behaviours in non-human animals, as they form a strong and stable bond with their human caregivers who often engage in affiliative interactions with diverse social partners. Nevertheless, it is still debated whether non-human animals are capable of experiencing such complex emotions. Even though caregivers frequently report observations of jealousy-like behaviours in dogs, behavioural studies in dogs have thus far led to contradictory results. Adding to this complexity, dogs appear extraordinarily skilled in understanding humans' communicative behaviour and can flexibly and diversely interact with them in social contexts. Here, we aimed at investigating (1) whether dogs indeed respond in a jealousy-consistent manner when seeing their caregiver interact in an affiliative way with a remotely controlled, realistic-looking fake dog, or (2) whether they would rather synchronize their reaction to the fake dog with the caregiver's behaviour, or (3) whether they respond directly to the caregiver without paying much attention to the third party. To address what drives the dogs' behaviours in this triadic situation, we compared four groups of dogs who first observed and then joined the interaction of either the caregiver or a stranger greeting or medically examining the fake dog. We found that the dogs initially responded negatively or neutrally when the fake dog entered the room but changed to more positive reactions when the caregiver approached the fake dog, especially if initiating a positive interaction. When being released, more dogs showed friendly behaviours towards the fake dog when the caregiver-rather than the stranger-was interacting with it. At the same time, however, the dogs tried to block the interaction of the caregiver with the fake dog more often than the one of the stranger. In conclusion, we did not find clear evidence for jealousy-like behaviours in dogs during the human-fake dog interactions, but we observed indicators of behavioural synchronization with the caregivers, suggesting that the caregivers' affiliative behaviours directed at a third party may more often facilitate positive than negative interactions in dogs.
宠物狗是研究非人类动物中与依恋相关以及可能类似嫉妒行为的理想候选对象,因为它们与人类照顾者形成了牢固而稳定的纽带,而人类照顾者经常与不同的社交伙伴进行亲密互动。然而,非人类动物是否能够体验到这种复杂的情感仍存在争议。尽管照顾者经常报告观察到狗有类似嫉妒的行为,但迄今为止,对狗的行为研究得出了相互矛盾的结果。更复杂的是,狗在理解人类的交流行为方面表现出非凡的技能,并且能够在社交场合中灵活多样地与人类互动。在这里,我们旨在研究:(1)当狗看到它们的照顾者与一个遥控的、看起来逼真的假狗进行亲密互动时,它们是否真的会以与嫉妒相符的方式做出反应;(2)它们是否会将对假狗的反应与照顾者的行为同步;(3)它们是否直接对照顾者做出反应而不太关注第三方。为了探究在这种三元情境中是什么驱动了狗的行为,我们比较了四组狗,它们首先观察然后加入照顾者或陌生人与假狗打招呼或进行医学检查的互动。我们发现,当假狗进入房间时,狗最初的反应是否定的或中性的,但当照顾者接近假狗时,尤其是当发起积极互动时,它们的反应会变得更加积极。当被放开时,与陌生人相比,当照顾者与假狗互动时,更多的狗对假狗表现出友好行为。然而,与此同时,狗比阻止陌生人与假狗互动更频繁地试图阻止照顾者与假狗的互动。总之,在人与假狗的互动中,我们没有找到狗有类似嫉妒行为的明确证据,但我们观察到了与照顾者行为同步的指标,这表明照顾者对第三方的亲密行为在狗中可能更常促进积极互动而非消极互动。