Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone

This study was performed to identify differences between a group of 36 dog owners who reported separation-related behavioral problems in their dogs and a group of 40 dog owners who perceived their dogs as well behaved in their absence. The variables compared between these groups were attachment, tra...

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Main Authors: González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa, Vanegas Farfano, Minerva, Landero Hernández, René
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.uanl.mx/19087/1/dogs%20differences%202018.pdf
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author González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa
Vanegas Farfano, Minerva
Landero Hernández, René
author_facet González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa
Vanegas Farfano, Minerva
Landero Hernández, René
author_sort González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa
collection Repositorio Institucional
description This study was performed to identify differences between a group of 36 dog owners who reported separation-related behavioral problems in their dogs and a group of 40 dog owners who perceived their dogs as well behaved in their absence. The variables compared between these groups were attachment, trainability, human-dog relationship, owner-dog compatibility, happiness, and stress. Dogs whose owners perceived that they were well behaved when left alone had more years within the household and higher scores in trainability; these owners also reported a better relationship with the dog and lower attachment scores than the group that perceived separation-related problems in their dogs. In addition, those owners who saw their dogs as well behaved when left alone showed higher perceived happiness and lower perceived stress. The equivalence in compatibility and the differences found in the mentioned variables suggest that owners and their dogs are compatible in activity preferences and in emotional variables such as anxiety or stress. It is possible that humans with higher levels of stress do not have a relaxed relationship with their dogs, which may contribute to their annoyance about their dogs’ behavior, and they spend less time with them. This could explain why they perceived their dogs as having separation-related behavioral problems. A dog’s behavior could be a source of stress for the owner affecting the owner’s perceived happiness.
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spelling eprints-190872020-06-16T13:08:47Z http://eprints.uanl.mx/19087/ Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa Vanegas Farfano, Minerva Landero Hernández, René SF Ganadería / Medicina veretrinaria This study was performed to identify differences between a group of 36 dog owners who reported separation-related behavioral problems in their dogs and a group of 40 dog owners who perceived their dogs as well behaved in their absence. The variables compared between these groups were attachment, trainability, human-dog relationship, owner-dog compatibility, happiness, and stress. Dogs whose owners perceived that they were well behaved when left alone had more years within the household and higher scores in trainability; these owners also reported a better relationship with the dog and lower attachment scores than the group that perceived separation-related problems in their dogs. In addition, those owners who saw their dogs as well behaved when left alone showed higher perceived happiness and lower perceived stress. The equivalence in compatibility and the differences found in the mentioned variables suggest that owners and their dogs are compatible in activity preferences and in emotional variables such as anxiety or stress. It is possible that humans with higher levels of stress do not have a relaxed relationship with their dogs, which may contribute to their annoyance about their dogs’ behavior, and they spend less time with them. This could explain why they perceived their dogs as having separation-related behavioral problems. A dog’s behavior could be a source of stress for the owner affecting the owner’s perceived happiness. 2018-07-11 Article PeerReviewed text en cc_by_nc_nd http://eprints.uanl.mx/19087/1/dogs%20differences%202018.pdf http://eprints.uanl.mx/19087/1.haspreviewThumbnailVersion/dogs%20differences%202018.pdf González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa y Vanegas Farfano, Minerva y Landero Hernández, René (2018) Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone. Journal of Veterinary Behavior (28). pp. 1-5. doi:10.1016/j.jveb.2018.07.010
spellingShingle SF Ganadería / Medicina veretrinaria
González Ramírez, Mónica Teresa
Vanegas Farfano, Minerva
Landero Hernández, René
Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
thumbnail https://rediab.uanl.mx/themes/sandal5/images/online.png
title Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
title_full Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
title_fullStr Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
title_full_unstemmed Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
title_short Differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
title_sort differences in stress and happiness between owners who perceive their dogs as well behaved or poorly behaved when they are left alone
topic SF Ganadería / Medicina veretrinaria
url http://eprints.uanl.mx/19087/1/dogs%20differences%202018.pdf
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