| Literature DB >> 29081760 |
Maria Petersson1, Kerstin Uvnäs-Moberg2, Anne Nilsson2, Lise-Lotte Gustafson2, Eva Hydbring-Sandberg3, Linda Handlin4.
Abstract
We have previously shown that dog-owner interaction results in increasing oxytocin levels in owners and dogs, decreasing cortisol levels in owners but increasing cortisol levels in dogs. The present study aimed to further investigate whether oxytocin and cortisol levels in the previously tested owners and dogs were associated with their behaviors during the interaction experiment. Ten female volunteer dog-owners and their male Labrador dogs participated in a 60 min interaction experiment with interaction taking place during 0-3 min and blood samples for analysis of oxytocin and cortisol were collected at 0, 1, 3, 5, 15, 30, and 60 min. The entire experiment was videotaped and the following variables were noted; the different types (stroking, scratching, patting and activating touch, i.e., scratching and patting combined) as well as the frequency of touch applied by the owner, the number of times the owner touched her dog, the dog's positions and time spent in each position. Correlations were analyzed between the behavioral variables and basal oxytocin levels, maximum oxytocin levels, delta oxytocin levels, basal cortisol levels and cortisol levels at 15 min. Owners with low oxytocin levels before and during the interaction touched their dogs more frequently (0 min: Rs = -0.683, p = 0.042; oxytocin maximum: Rs = -0.783, p = 0.013). The lower the dogs' oxytocin levels during the interaction, the more stroking they received (Rs = -0.717, p = 0.041). The more frequently activating touch was applied by the owner, the higher the dogs' cortisol levels became (15 min: Rs = 0.661, p = 0.038). The higher the owners' maximum oxytocin level the fewer position changes the dogs made (Rs = -0.817, p = 0.007) and the shorter time they spent sitting (Rs = -0.786, p = 0.036), whereas the higher the owners' basal cortisol levels, the longer time the dogs spent standing (0 min: Rs = 0.683, p = 0.041). In conclusion, oxytocin and cortisol levels, both in dogs and in their owners, are associated with the way the owners interact with their dogs and also with behaviors caused by the interaction.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; cortisol; dog–human interaction; oxytocin
Year: 2017 PMID: 29081760 PMCID: PMC5645535 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Ethogram describing the behaviors observed in the present study.
| Behavior | Definition | Sampling method |
|---|---|---|
| Owner stroking | Owner strokes the dog using her palm | Continuousa |
| Owner scratching | Owner scratches the dog | Continuousa |
| Owner patting | Owner pats the dog | Continuousa |
| Owner touching | The owners’ total amount of touch (Stroking + scratching + patting) | Continuousa |
| Activating touch | The total amount of scratching and patting | Continuousa |
| Verbal rewarding | Owner reward the dog verbally (e.g., “good dog”) | Continuousa |
| Verbal reprimanding | Owner reprimands the dog verbally (e.g., “here”) | Continuousa |
| Verbal instructions | Owner give the dog verbal instructions (e.g., “sit”) | Continuousa |
| Dog sitting | Dog is sitting with front legs extended and hind legs curved | Continuousb |
| Dog standing | Dog is standing up on all four paws | Continuousb |
| Dog lying down | Dog is lying down | Continuousb |
| Dog changing position | Dog changing position (changing from sitting, lying down, and standing) | Continuousa |
The frequency of the interaction behaviors studied.
| Total touch (number of times/time period) | Stroking (number of times/time period) | Petting (number of times/time period) | Scratching (number of times/time period) | Activating touch∗ (number of times/time period) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–3 min | 170 (146–206) | 84 (26–111) | 22 (5–55) | 88 (47–141) | 94 (34-150) |
| 4–60 min | 6 (1–11.5) | – | – | – | – |
The owners’ and the dogs’ oxytocin and cortisol levels during the experiment (data from the 10 female owners for both oxytocin and cortisol, and from nine dogs for oxytocin and ten dogs for cortsiol).
| 0 min | 1 min | 3 min | 5 min | 15 min | 30 min | 60 min | OT max | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oxytocin levels (pmol/l) | Dogs | 155.8 (26.9) | 211.2 (30.7) | 236.9 (38.7) | 178.6 (29.6) | 163.5 (34.5) | 157.5 (36.0) | 157.5 (41.1) | 251.8 (34.5) |
| Owners | 168.5 (34.6) | 169.8 (34.1) | 180.6 (34.4) | 170.2 (27.8) | 146.4 (34.7) | 171.3 (34.2) | 165.1 (26.3) | 187.0 (33.6) | |
| Cortisol levels (nmol/l) | Dogs | 168.4 (14.8) | 169.4 (16.1) | 168.1 (15.3) | 180.1 (17.8) | 224.1 (32.5) | 202.8 (18.3) | 190.2 (18.8) | |
| Owners | 389.8 (119.7) | 382.7 (107.4) | 382.7 (109.9) | 387.6 (119.6) | 362.1 (107.9) | 331.6 (80.1) | 305.2 (62.6) |
Correlation table of hormone levels and behaviors.
| Hormone | Behavior | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Dog oxytocin max | Frequency of stroking 0–3 min | ||
| Dog cortisol 0 min | Frequency of activating touch 0–3 min | ||
| Dog cortisol 15 min | Frequency of activating touch 0–3 min | ||
| Owner oxytocin 0 min | Frequency of total touch 0–3 min | ||
| Owner oxytocin max | Frequency of total touch 0–3 min | ||
| Owner oxytocin increase | Frequency of total touch 4–60 min | ||
| Owner cortisol 0 min | Time dog standing up 4–60 min | ||
| Owner oxytocin max | Time dog sitting down 4–60 min | ||
| Owner oxytocin max | Frequency of the dogs’ position changes | ||
| Owner oxytocin increase | Frequency of verbal reprimands |