Grigg Emma K, Liu Serene, Dempsey Denise G, Wong Kylee, Bain Melissa, Sollers John J, Haddock Rani, Kogan Lori R, Barnhard Jennifer A, Tringali Ashley A, Thigpen Abigail P, Hart Lynette A
Department of Population Health and Reproduction, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States.
Graduate Group in Epidemiology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2022 Jul 11;9:897287. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.897287. eCollection 2022.
Negative stress due to human handling has been reported for a number of domestic animals, including dogs. Many companion dogs display significant stress during routine care in the veterinary clinic, risking injury to staff and potentially compromising the quality of care that these dogs receive. On the other hand, positive interactions with humans can have a beneficial effect on dogs, particularly in stressful situations such as animal shelters. Research has shown that dogs can detect human emotions through visual, auditory, and chemical channels, and that dogs will exhibit emotional contagion, particularly with familiar humans. This study investigated relationships between emotional states of dogs and unfamiliar human handlers, using simultaneous measures of cardiac activity and behavior, during two sessions of three consecutive routine handling sets. Measures of cardiac activity included mean heart rate (HR), and two measures of heart rate variability (HRV): the root mean square of successive differences between normal heartbeats (RMSSD); and the high frequency absolute power component of HRV, log transformed (HF). We also assessed human handlers' emotional state during handling sessions following an intervention designed to reduce stress, compared with sessions conducted on a different day and following a control activity. Polar H10 cardiac sensors were used to simultaneously record cardiac activity for both canine and human participants, and behavioral data were collected via digital video. The strongest influence on the dogs' stress levels in our study was found to be increasing familiarity with the setting and the handler; HR and SI decreased, and HRV (as RMSSD) increased, significantly from the first to the third handling set. Canine HRV (as HF) was also highest in set 3, although the difference was not statistically significant. There were no strong patterns found in the human cardiac data across handling set, session, or by pre-handling activity. We did not find consistent support for emotional contagion between the dogs and their handlers in this study, perhaps due to the brief time that the dogs spent with the handlers. Recommendations for application to dog handling, and limitations of our methods, are described.
据报道,包括狗在内的许多家养动物都会因人类的操作而产生负面压力。许多宠物狗在兽医诊所的日常护理过程中会表现出明显的压力,这不仅会对工作人员造成伤害,还可能影响这些狗所接受的护理质量。另一方面,与人类的积极互动对狗有有益的影响,特别是在动物收容所等压力较大的环境中。研究表明,狗可以通过视觉、听觉和化学渠道感知人类的情绪,并且狗会表现出情绪感染,尤其是与熟悉的人类在一起时。本研究通过连续三个常规处理组的两个阶段,同时测量心脏活动和行为,调查了狗与不熟悉的人类处理者之间的情绪状态关系。心脏活动的测量指标包括平均心率(HR)和两个心率变异性(HRV)指标:正常心跳之间连续差值的均方根(RMSSD);以及经对数转换的HRV高频绝对功率分量(HF)。我们还评估了在进行旨在减轻压力的干预后,与在不同日期进行的会话以及对照活动后相比,人类处理者在处理会话期间的情绪状态。使用Polar H10心脏传感器同时记录犬类和人类参与者的心脏活动,并通过数字视频收集行为数据。在我们的研究中,发现对狗的压力水平影响最大的因素是对环境和处理者的熟悉程度增加;从第一个处理组到第三个处理组,HR和SI降低,HRV(以RMSSD衡量)显著增加。犬类HRV(以HF衡量)在第3组中也最高,尽管差异没有统计学意义。在不同处理组、会话或处理前活动的人类心脏数据中未发现明显模式。在本研究中,我们没有找到狗与其处理者之间情绪感染的一致证据,这可能是由于狗与处理者相处的时间较短。文中描述了对狗处理的应用建议以及我们方法的局限性。