| Literature DB >> 23284765 |
Michele Wan1, Niall Bolger, Frances A Champagne.
Abstract
To investigate the role of experience in humans' perception of emotion using canine visual signals, we asked adults with various levels of dog experience to interpret the emotions of dogs displayed in videos. The video stimuli had been pre-categorized by an expert panel of dog behavior professionals as showing examples of happy or fearful dog behavior. In a sample of 2,163 participants, the level of dog experience strongly predicted identification of fearful, but not of happy, emotional examples. The probability of selecting the "fearful" category to describe fearful examples increased with experience and ranged from.30 among those who had never lived with a dog to greater than.70 among dog professionals. In contrast, the probability of selecting the "happy" category to describe happy emotional examples varied little by experience, ranging from.90 to.93. In addition, the number of physical features of the dog that participants reported using for emotional interpretations increased with experience, and in particular, more-experienced respondents were more likely to attend to the ears. Lastly, more-experienced respondents provided lower difficulty and higher accuracy self-ratings than less-experienced respondents when interpreting both happy and fearful emotional examples. The human perception of emotion in other humans has previously been shown to be sensitive to individual differences in social experience, and the results of the current study extend the notion of experience-dependent processes from the intraspecific to the interspecific domain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23284765 PMCID: PMC3526646 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Emotion Categorizations of Happy Emotional Examples.
| Experience Group | Happy | Fearful | Angry | Sad | Neutral |
| Low-Exp | 89.9% | 3.6% | 0.3% | 0.8% | 5.4% |
| Owners | 92.5% | 1.2% | 0.3% | 0.1% | 6.0% |
| Prof<10 | 91.1% | 2.9% | 0.1% | 0.1% | 5.7% |
| Prof10+ | 89.8% | 1.9% | 0.2% | 0.2% | 7.9% |
Percentages indicate number of selections of each category out of total number of responses by each experience group.
Emotion Categorizations of Fearful Emotional Examples.
| Experience Group | Happy | Fearful | Angry | Sad | Neutral |
| Low-Exp | 16.6% | 34.7% | 13.1% | 7.8% | 27.8% |
| Owners | 9.9% | 59.9% | 2.7% | 4.1% | 23.4% |
| Prof<10 | 5.5% | 71.9% | 2.8% | 3.1% | 16.6% |
| Prof10+ | 3.9% | 72.0% | 1.6% | 3.3% | 19.1% |
Percentages indicate number of selections of each category out of total number of responses by each experience group.
Figure 1Emotion categorizations according to experience with dogs.
Probability of “happy” categorizations of happy emotional examples and “fearful” categorizations of fearful emotional examples by experience group. Error bars represent standard errors of the means. Model-fitted values account for effects of participant’s sex, participant’s age, and individual videos. Sig. pairwise comparisons (Sidak-corrected): Fearful examples: Low-Exp< Own
Figure 2Number of physical features selected
according to experience with dogs. Number of features reported by participants as emotionally informative; by experience group. Response choices consisted of “eyes,” “ears,” “mouth/tongue,” “legs/paws,” and “tail.” Error bars represent standard errors of the means. Model-fitted values account for effects of participant’s sex, participant’s age, and individual videos. Sig. pairwise comparisons (Sidak-corrected): Happy: Low-Exp< Own
Figure 3Probability of reporting particular features as emotionally informative, according to experience with dogs.
A) eyes, B) ears, C) mouth/tongue, D) legs/paws, and E) tail. Error bars represent standard errors of the means. Model-fitted values account for effects of participant’s sex, participant’s age, and individual videos. Sig. pairwise comparisons (Sidak-corrected): Eyes - Happy: Low-Exp = Own
Figure 4Self-reported difficulty and accuracy ratings according to experience with dogs.
A) Difficulty ratings and B) accuracy ratings for interpretations of happy and fearful examples by experience group. Difficulty ratings: 1 = very easy, 9 = very difficult. Accuracy ratings: 1 = very inaccurate; 9 = very accurate. Error bars represent standard errors of the means. Model-fitted values account for effects of participant’s sex, participant’s age, and individual videos. Sig. pairwise comparisons (Sidak-corrected): Difficulty - Happy: All Others
Descriptions of Video Stimuli.
| Video ID | Brief Description | Expert Categorizationand Percent Agreement | Expert Description of Specific Behaviors |
| 1 | Golden Retriever rolls on back in grass, looks around, and walks away. | Happy (100%) | Rolling calmly, loose tail wag, ears gently back, looking around with open mouth and relaxed commissures (corners of mouth), trots away with tail up and gentle wag |
| 2 | Border Collie sniffs ground, then approaches and greets woman. | Happy (100%) | Gentle tail wag, increasing during interaction; play bow; gentle jump onto person; relaxed eye contact; responsive to action of person; exploring environment without tensing muscles |
| 3 | Irish Setter stands on hind legs while licking man’s face. | Happy (100%) | Gentle mid-position tail wag, relaxed musculature, steady licking without turning away, not frenetic licking, responsive to handler’s movement |
| 9 | Maltese runs in the snow alongside a woman. | Happy (100%) | Running forward with upward bounce, tail up and loose, looking directly back at person with open mouth and brief eye contact, relaxed ears |
| 10 | Maltese walks around two people near a door and briefly jumps up on one of them. | Happy (100%) | Jumping up in a relaxed way; prancing around, face relaxed and loose; not avoiding petting; relaxed, high, flexible tail wag, voluntary climb onto person with muscles loose |
| 5 | Large mixed-breed is sitting indoors next to people and looks at camera from across the room. | Fearful (75%) | Very stiff, eyes wide open, ears forward, forehead wrinkled, mouth tight |
| 6 | Border Collie is held by standing woman, then placed on the ground. | Fearful (100%) | Squirming, stiff, licking lips, can see whites of eyes, facing away from person, attempts to escape once on ground |
| 7 | Medium mixed-breed barks at camera while moving from side to side behind handler. | Fearful (100%) | Stiff tail wagging, barking, jumping forward and then back, hiding behind person, holding ears and body back, slightly lowered tail while wagging in circular manner, not maintaining gaze |
| 12 | Shepherd mix stands just outside a screen door, facing the camera. | Fearful (75%) | Low and fast tail wag, tense areas around dog’s eyes and muzzle, heavy panting, head-turns away from camera, ears pressed back, weight slightly shifted to back end, huge tongue, eyes bulging |
Brief descriptions of the scenario displayed in each video, emotion categorizations with percent agreement in initial expert panel, and examples of detailed behavioral descriptions provided by experts. Supplementary analyses (Text S1), excluding the two videos (5 and 12) that received lesser agreement, produced very similar findings as those reported in the Results.