Recognizing dog emotions, especially aggression, may improve with age

In a study of children and adults, both higher age and having had a pet dog were associated with better ability to recognize dog emotions from facial expressions. Heini Törnqvist of the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on July 26, 2023, showing 4-yr-olds were less able to recognize aggressive dog expressions than older children and adults.

Recognizing emotions from facial expressions is a key part of nonverbal communication between species. Prior research has suggested that 3- to 5-year-olds may be less able to recognize dogs’ emotions than older children and adults. However, more research is needed to clarify the relationships between age, prior dog experience, and the ability to recognize dog emotions.

To help deepen understanding, Törnqvist and colleagues conducted a study involving 34 adults, 28 4-year-olds and 31 6-year-olds. All participants were asked to view images on a computer screen of various dog and human faces displaying different expressions. The participants were then asked to rate each expression according to its level of happiness, anger, positivity, negativity, and amount of emotional arousal.

Overall, in line with prior research, people of all ages and prior dog experience—having had a pet dog in their family—gave roughly similar ratings of the images. Still, there were some statistical differences between the groups.

Regardless of pet dog experience, adults and 6-year-olds more often recognized aggressive dog faces correctly than 4-year-olds. However, 4- and 6-year-olds showed similar abilities in recognizing human expressions.

Compared to adult participants, children rated aggressive dog expressions as being more positive and having a lower level of arousal. Participants without pet dog experience rated aggressive dog expressions as being more positive than participants with dog experience. Compared to aggressive human expressions, aggressive dog expressions were rated by children as being more positive and having lower arousal.

These findings suggest that people’s ability to recognize dog emotions, especially aggression, may improve with age, which could arise from both more experience with dogs and maturation of brain structures involved in recognizing expressions. More research is needed to deepen these findings, which could also help inform efforts to improve the quality of interactions between children and dogs.

The authors add: “Aggressive dog expressions were especially rated incorrectly by 4-year-olds, and they rated aggressive dogs as significantly more positive and lower in arousal than adults.”

Journal Reference :

  1. Törnqvist H, Höller H, Vsetecka K, Hoehl S, Kujala MV (2023) Matters of development and experience: Evaluation of dog and human emotional expressions by children and adults. PLoS ONE 18(7): e0288137. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0288137

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Launch timeline for Atlas 5’s mission with Landsat 9 thumbnail

Launch timeline for Atlas 5’s mission with Landsat 9

A United Launch Atlas 5 rocket is set for launch with the Landsat 9 satellite, a joint project between NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey, and four small CubeSat rideshare payloads. The 194-foot-tall (59-meter) rocket, propelled by an RD-180 main engine, is set for liftoff during a 30-minute launch window Monday that opens at 11:12…
Read More
Latest COVID Surge Pushes Parents to Next-Level Stress thumbnail

Latest COVID Surge Pushes Parents to Next-Level Stress

The list of U.S. parents’ pandemic burdens this winter is longer and more chaotic than ever: More kids have been infected with the novel coronavirus, or SARS-CoV-2, despite scrupulous safety measures. Outbreaks have occurred in staff-strained schools and daycare centers. Many have faced dreaded returns to remote learning. COVID vaccine boosters remain unauthorized for most…
Read More
Connecting the Dots | Avoiding HAPS mishaps thumbnail

Connecting the Dots | Avoiding HAPS mishaps

As low-orbiting broadband constellations become an increasingly dominant force in the satellite industry, stratospheric high-altitude platform stations (HAPS) are closing in on commercializing connectivity from altitudes much closer to Earth. After being spun out of European aerospace giant Airbus last year, Aalto plans to set up its first permanent base for stratospheric aircraft in Kenya
Read More
Interest rates have been left on hold thumbnail

Interest rates have been left on hold

Mortgage holders have been given a temporary reprieve after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left interest rates on hold at 4.35 per cent.It's the second meeting this year where the central bank has kept the cash rate target unchanged.But RBA governor Michele Bullock warned the board wasn't ruling anything in or out in the
Read More
The Ultimate Guide to the Hierophant Tarot Meaning thumbnail

The Ultimate Guide to the Hierophant Tarot Meaning

By: HowStuffWorks  |  Aug 10, 2023 The Hierophant, numbered as V in the Major Arcana, represents religious structures, traditions, and spiritual guidance. DAJ / Getty Images/amana images RF The Hierophant Tarot card, a mysterious and powerful symbol, holds the keys to spiritual wisdom and guidance. As you delve deeper into the hierophant tarot meaning, you
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share