Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship

Dogs have evolved alongside humans since their domestication 15 000 years ago. No other animal has lived in such close proximity to humans which makes the bond between them unique. The dog-human relationship has started to interest scientists and studies have been performed to investigate the nature...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Habbe, Johanna
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2016
Materias:
_version_ 1855572224206962688
author Habbe, Johanna
author_browse Habbe, Johanna
author_facet Habbe, Johanna
author_sort Habbe, Johanna
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Dogs have evolved alongside humans since their domestication 15 000 years ago. No other animal has lived in such close proximity to humans which makes the bond between them unique. The dog-human relationship has started to interest scientists and studies have been performed to investigate the nature of this bond. These studies suggest that the relationship resembles that of the relationship between children and their parents. Furthermore, it has been shown that dogs express attachment behaviour towards their owner and that dogs use their owner as a secure base. However, few studies have looked at how the human’s attachment style and caregiving style may affect the relationship between dogs and humans. In this study, we looked at how the human caregiving style affected the dog-human relationship when faced with different challenging situations. We applied two of the four caregiving styles described in human psychology; the secure caregiving style and the disorganised caregiving style. The dogs interacted with two test persons applying one caregiving style each for 15 days. They were then exposed to challenging situations together with these two persons to investigate which one the dog would choose to seek comfort from. The results showed that when dogs were exposed to the approach of an unfamiliar person they were more oriented towards the person with the secure caregiving style. When the dogs were left alone in a room for three minutes and then reunited with both test persons the dogs initiated more physical contact and spent more time in proximity to the person with the secure caregiving style. These findings support the hypotheses that dogs are affected by human caregiving style and that they preferred to seek comfort from a person mimicking a secure caregiving style compared to a person mimicking a disorganised caregiving style. These findings help us get a better understanding of the characteristics of the dog human relationship and can help when matching dog and owner when rehoming dogs to ensure a better welfare for the dog.
format H2
id RepoSLU13316
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU133162019-02-25T13:38:04Z Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship Habbe, Johanna human-dog relationship dog behaviour attachment style caregiving style anthrozoology Dogs have evolved alongside humans since their domestication 15 000 years ago. No other animal has lived in such close proximity to humans which makes the bond between them unique. The dog-human relationship has started to interest scientists and studies have been performed to investigate the nature of this bond. These studies suggest that the relationship resembles that of the relationship between children and their parents. Furthermore, it has been shown that dogs express attachment behaviour towards their owner and that dogs use their owner as a secure base. However, few studies have looked at how the human’s attachment style and caregiving style may affect the relationship between dogs and humans. In this study, we looked at how the human caregiving style affected the dog-human relationship when faced with different challenging situations. We applied two of the four caregiving styles described in human psychology; the secure caregiving style and the disorganised caregiving style. The dogs interacted with two test persons applying one caregiving style each for 15 days. They were then exposed to challenging situations together with these two persons to investigate which one the dog would choose to seek comfort from. The results showed that when dogs were exposed to the approach of an unfamiliar person they were more oriented towards the person with the secure caregiving style. When the dogs were left alone in a room for three minutes and then reunited with both test persons the dogs initiated more physical contact and spent more time in proximity to the person with the secure caregiving style. These findings support the hypotheses that dogs are affected by human caregiving style and that they preferred to seek comfort from a person mimicking a secure caregiving style compared to a person mimicking a disorganised caregiving style. These findings help us get a better understanding of the characteristics of the dog human relationship and can help when matching dog and owner when rehoming dogs to ensure a better welfare for the dog. SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2016 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/13316/
spellingShingle human-dog relationship
dog behaviour
attachment style
caregiving style
anthrozoology
Habbe, Johanna
Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title_full Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title_fullStr Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title_full_unstemmed Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title_short Human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
title_sort human caregiving style and its effect on the dog-human relationship
topic human-dog relationship
dog behaviour
attachment style
caregiving style
anthrozoology