Gå til innhold
Hundesonen.no

Recommended Posts

Skrevet

In writing a summary of dog park law, Fran Breitkopf and I noted that dog park sociology would inevitably become a topic for scientific journals. We were thinking about what dog parks mean for people, rather than dogs, but four Canadian researchers (Ottenheimer Carrier et al., citation below) have published a study suggesting that dog parks may be very entertaining places for dogs that score high on Extraversion in personality tests, while probably being threatening and uncomfortable for dogs that score high on Neuroticism.

Cortisol, hydrocortisone, is a steroid hormone produced in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in response to stress and other stimuli. It increases blood sugar through gluconeogenesis and aids in fat, protein, and carbohydrate metabolism. It has been studied in baboons, monkeys, dogs, horses, and birds, though a recent paper notes that the relationships between cortisol, social behaviors, and personality traits have rarely been studied in non-human animals. There have been some cortisol studies of dogs in kennel settings, as well as work situations for trained dogs, including service, therapy, and police dogs, but companion animals have generally been ignored.
Canine Personalities
In an attempt to determine why cortisol levels might increase more in some dogs than others during visits to dog parks, the authors of this study looked for correlations that might occur based on a dog’s personality. Studies of dog personality have often focused on “coping styles.” Quoting Horváth et al., a study of police dogs (cite below), they note:
“[P]olice dogs characterized behaviourally as having an ambivalent coping style showed more signs of acute stress (e.g., low body posture, snout-licking, and paw-lifting) and demonstrated a cortisol surge in response to a threatening stimulus.”

Other assessments of personality are based on analysis of personality traits, such as exploration, boldness, fearfulness, and aggression. For their dog park study, the Canadian researchers chose a personality assessment called the Monash Canine Personality Questionnaire-Revised (MCPQ-R), which uses a rating scale for 26 traits clustered into five personality dimensions:

  • Extraversion
  • Motivation
  • Training Focus
  • Amicability
  • Neuroticism
Motivation and Training Focus are perhaps unique to domestic dogs in terms of personality measurement. The researchers sought to determine relationships between cortisol, personality, and specific behaviors and postural changes indicative of play, agonism (conflict behavior), and stress, of dogs interacting in dog parks.

Les mer: http://doglawreporter.blogspot.no/2013/05/extraverted-dogs-seem-to-enjoy-dog.html

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Gjest
Skriv svar til emnet...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Hvem er aktive   0 medlemmer

    • Ingen innloggede medlemmer aktive


  • Nye innlegg

    • Min golden (jakt) røyter bare to ganger i året, men de vanlige goldene jeg vokste opp med røyta helt sykt mye😅 Ellers er de veldig fine hunder, så lenge de får brukt hodet nok. 
    • Jeg har min med på trening i all slags vær, og da kan det fort bli timer i bilen. Men ved å parkere i skyggen (hvis mulig), silvershade duk og alle vinduer åpne pluss glippe på bagasjerommet (med krok) så er det alltid behagelig i bilen, selv i 30 varmegrader. 
    • Det kan være mange grunner til at en hund ikke fungerer i hundemøter. Mye av grunnlaget legges i valpekassa, hvordan mor og søsken interagerer, og sosialisering med andre hunder i valpe- og unghundtiden. I tillegg kommer rasetypisk adferd og arvelighet. Avhengig av adferden til mor og hva slags sosialisering hunden har fått i ung alder så har hunden lært seg hvordan den skal eller kan oppføre seg rundt andre. Eller ikke lært det, forsåvidt. Det er aldri for sent å trene på sosialisering, men er viktig å lese språket til alle de involverte hundene og gå inn og avbryte adferd som ikke er greit. Hvis andre hunder sier fra og setter grenser uten at hun respekterer det er det ditt ansvar som eier å fjerne henne fra situasjonen. Om hun får fortsette lærer hun jo bare at det er greit å holde på slik.
    • Kan en hund ha null sosiale ferdigheter med andre hunder? Hun har konflikter med alle hunder hun møter. Akkurat som hun ikke skjønner at hun er for mye og ikke tar til seg til at andre hunder sier i fra til henne? Hun tar jo ikke hintet.
    • Det er nok ikke pga navnene du ikke har fått svar🙂I mange år nå har det vært fryktelig liten aktivitet på forumet her. Syntes alle navnene var fine jeg likte Lilly best. Masse lykke til med valp!!
  • Nylig opprettede emner

×
×
  • Opprett ny...