Paul Elizabeth S, Coombe Emily, McGreevy Paul D, Packer Rowena M A, Neville Vikki
Bristol Veterinary School, University of Bristol, Langford, UK.
School of Environmental and Rural Science, Faculty of Science, Agriculture, Business and Law, University of New England, Armidale, Australia.
Anthrozoos. 2023 Feb 27;36(4):533-553. doi: 10.1080/08927936.2023.2176590.
Brachycephalic dog breeds have become increasingly popular in recent years, despite showing a high incidence of conformation-related disorders and early mortality. It has been suggested that this popularity might be explained by public perceptions of these short-muzzled dogs as looking particularly infant-like or "cute." Here, the hypothesis that short-muzzled breeds are especially likely to be described as cute was investigated by analyzing the word contents of advertisements for dogs and puppies being sold online. The ages and breeds of dogs being advertised were considered, in addition to whether the text of each advertisement included the word "cute" or two associated words: "adorable" and "sweet." Analyses of the entire sample of advertisements ( = 43,312) indicated that younger dogs were more likely to be advertised as "cute" and "adorable," while older ones were more likely to be advertised as "sweet." Shortmuzzled, brachycephalic breeds (cranio-facial ratio < 0.5) were more likely to be advertised as "cute," with brachycephalic puppies under 6 months of age being particularly likely to be called "cute" and also "adorable." However, breed size had a larger and wider effect on word use in advertisements, with smaller dogs being advertised more frequently using all three words: "cute," "adorable," and "sweet." When data for adult dogs only were considered ( = 11,400), and continuous muzzle shortening and age data were used, a somewhat different and more complex pattern of results were found. Use of the words "cute" and "adorable" were not associated with degree of muzzle shortening among these adult dogs, but "sweet" was used more often in advertisements for longer-muzzled breeds. We conclude that the present dataset provides partial support for the assertion that short-muzzled dogs are described as more "cute" than longer-muzzled ones, but that small size is a better predictor of the use of "cute" and its synonyms.
近年来,短头犬种越来越受欢迎,尽管它们出现与外形相关疾病和早期死亡的几率很高。有人认为,这种受欢迎程度可能是因为公众认为这些短鼻犬看起来特别像婴儿或“可爱”。在此,通过分析网上出售的犬只和幼犬广告的文字内容,对短鼻犬种特别容易被描述为可爱这一假设进行了调查。除了每则广告的文字是否包含“可爱”一词或两个相关词汇:“讨人喜欢”和“甜美”之外,还考虑了所广告犬只的年龄和品种。对整个广告样本(n = 43,312)的分析表明,幼犬更有可能被宣传为“可爱”和“讨人喜欢”,而成年犬则更有可能被宣传为“甜美”。短鼻的短头犬种(颅面比例 < 0.5)更有可能被宣传为“可爱”,6个月以下的短头幼犬尤其有可能被称为“可爱”,也被称为“讨人喜欢”。然而,犬种大小对广告用词的影响更大、更广泛,体型较小的犬只在广告中更频繁地使用“可爱”、“讨人喜欢”和“甜美”这三个词。当仅考虑成年犬的数据(n = 11,400),并使用连续的口鼻缩短和年龄数据时,发现了一种略有不同且更复杂的结果模式。在这些成年犬中,“可爱”和“讨人喜欢”这两个词的使用与口鼻缩短程度无关,但“甜美”一词在口鼻较长犬种的广告中使用得更频繁。我们得出结论,目前的数据集为短鼻犬比长鼻犬被描述为更“可爱”这一说法提供了部分支持,但体型小是使用“可爱”及其同义词的更好预测指标。