Gnanadesikan Gitanjali E, Carranza Elizabeth, King Katherine M, Flyer Abigail C, Ossello Gianna, Smith Paige G, Steklis Netzin G, Steklis H Dieter, Connelly Jessica J, Barnett Melissa, Gee Nancy, Tecot Stacey, MacLean Evan L
School of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; Cognitive Science Program, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Arizona, Oro Valley, AZ, USA.
Horm Behav. 2024 May;161:105523. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2024.105523. Epub 2024 Mar 13.
Although research has shown that pets appear to provide certain types of social support to children, little is known about the physiological bases of these effects, especially in naturalistic contexts. In this study, we investigated the effect of free-form interactions between children (ages 8-10 years) and dogs on salivary cortisol concentrations in both species. We further investigated the role of the child-dog relationship by comparing interactions with the child's pet dog to interactions with an unfamiliar dog or a nonsocial control condition, and modeled associations between survey measures of the human-animal bond and children's physiological responses. In both children and dogs, salivary cortisol decreased from pre- to post-interaction; the effect was strongest for children interacting with an unfamiliar dog (compared to their pet dog) and for the pet dogs (compared to the unfamiliar dog). We found minimal evidence for associations between cortisol output and behaviors coded from video, but children scoring higher on survey measures of the human-animal bond exhibited the greatest reductions in cortisol when interacting with dogs. Self-reported loneliness was not related to cortisol or the human-animal bond, but measures of both loneliness and the human-animal bond were higher among children who participated after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, relative to those who participated before the pandemic. This study builds on previous work that investigated potential stress-buffering effects of human-animal interaction during explicit stressors and demonstrates important physiological correlates of naturalistic interactions between children and dogs, similar to those that occur in daily life.
尽管研究表明宠物似乎能为儿童提供某些类型的社会支持,但对于这些影响的生理基础我们知之甚少,尤其是在自然情境中。在本研究中,我们调查了8至10岁儿童与狗之间自由形式的互动对两个物种唾液皮质醇浓度的影响。我们还通过比较与孩子的宠物狗互动、与陌生狗互动以及非社交对照条件下的互动,进一步研究了儿童与狗之间关系的作用,并建立了人类与动物关系的调查测量指标与儿童生理反应之间的关联模型。在儿童和狗中,唾液皮质醇在互动前后均有所下降;与宠物狗互动的儿童(与陌生狗相比)以及宠物狗(与陌生狗相比)的这种影响最为明显。我们发现皮质醇分泌与视频编码行为之间的关联证据很少,但在人类与动物关系调查测量指标上得分较高的儿童在与狗互动时皮质醇下降幅度最大。自我报告的孤独感与皮质醇或人类与动物的关系无关,但相对于疫情大流行前参与研究的儿童,在2019冠状病毒病大流行开始后参与研究的儿童的孤独感和人类与动物关系的测量指标都更高。本研究建立在之前的工作基础上,之前的工作调查了在明确的应激源期间人类与动物互动的潜在压力缓冲效应,并证明了儿童与狗之间自然互动的重要生理相关性,类似于日常生活中发生的情况。