| Literature DB >> 26479883 |
Masashi Hasegawa1, Nobuyo Ohtani2, Mitsuaki Ohta3.
Abstract
The facial expressions and body postures of dogs can give helpful information about their moods and emotional states. People can more effectively obedience train their dogs if we can identify the mannerisms associated with learning in dogs. The aim of this study was to clarify the dog's body language during operant conditioning to predict achievement in the test that followed by measuring the duration of behaviors. Forty-six untrained dogs (17 males and 26 females) of various breeds were used. Each session consisted of 5 minutes of training with a treat reward followed by 3 minutes of rest and finally an operant conditioning test that consisted of 20 "hand motion" cues. The operant tests were conducted a total of nine times over three consecutive days, and the success numbers were counted. The duration of the dog's behavior, focusing on the dog's eyes, mouth, ears, tail and tail-wagging, was recorded during the operant conditioning sessions before the test. Particular behaviors, including wide-eyes, closed mouth, erect ears, and forward and high tail carriage, without wagging or with short and quick wagging, related to high achievement results. It is concluded that dogs' body language during operant conditioning was related to their success rate.Entities:
Keywords: Canis familiaris; body language; learning; operant conditioning; training
Year: 2014 PMID: 26479883 PMCID: PMC4494300 DOI: 10.3390/ani4010045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Characteristics of dogs (Canis familiaris) used in the present study.
| Breed | Sex | Age (months) | Breed | Sex | Age (months) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ♂ | 62 |
| ♂ | 49 | |
|
| ♂ | 54 |
| ♂ | 66 | |
|
| ♂ | 67 |
| ♀ | 79 | |
|
| ♀ | 49 |
| ♀ | 12 | |
|
| ♂ | 12 |
| ♀ | 12 | |
|
| ♀ | 12 |
| ♂ | 27 | |
|
| ♀ | 12 |
| ♀ | 30 | |
|
| ♀ | 25 |
| ♂ | 77 | |
|
| ♂ | 36 |
| ♀ | 30 | |
|
| ♀ | 48 |
| ♂ | 12 | |
|
| ♀ | 66 |
| ♀ | 13 | |
|
| ♀ | 12 |
| ♀ | 12 | |
|
| ♀ | 12 |
| ♀ | 54 | |
|
| ♂ | UN |
| ♀ | 24 | |
|
| ♀ | 17 |
| ♀ | 55 | |
|
| ♂ | 45 |
| ♂ | UN | |
|
| ♀ | 41 |
| ♂ | 25 | |
|
| ♀ | 40 |
| ♀ | 49 | |
|
| ♀ | 17 |
| ♂ | 39 | |
|
| ♂ | 24 |
| ♀ | 12 | |
|
| ♀ | 73 |
| ♂ | 36 | |
|
| ♀ | UN | UN: Unknown | |||
The daily training schedule.
| Session 1 | |||
| Time | 5 min | 3 min | hand motion 20 times |
| Detail | Training with treat | Resting | Operant conditioning test |
Figure 1Categories of eyes (Ey) in dogs during their training.
Figure 2Categories of mouth (M) expressions in dogs during their training.
Figure 3Categories of ear (Ea) appearances in dogs during their training.
Figure 4Categories of tail (T) body language in dogs during their training.
Categories of dog tail-wagging (TW) during operant conditioning training.
| Tail-Wagging: | TW-1 | Tail is not wagging |
| TW-2 | Only the tip of the tail is wagging | |
| TW-3 | Tail is wagging shortly and slowly | |
| TW-4 | Tail is wagging shortly and quickly | |
| TW-5 | Tail is wagging widely and slowly | |
| TW-6 | Tail is wagging widely and quickly | |
| TW-7 | Tail is wagging with wiggling at the hip and waist | |
| TW-8 | Tail is spinning around |
Statistical results on the duration of each behavioral category as good predictors of the achievement rate in the operant conditioning tests (Stepwise multiple regression analysis).
* P < 0.05,** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001.