The overall goal of this procedure is to analyze how dog owners interact with their pet dogs in a standardized set of tasks mirroring the everyday life of dog owner dyads. This method can help answer different questions and key questions in the fields of dog ethology, anthrozoology, and human social psychology, such as how owners influence their dog's behaviors during everyday life interactions. The main advantage of this technique is that it combines behavioral analysis in a factor analytic approach, allowing for a comprehensive analysis of a dog owner's interaction styles.
When the dog owner arrives to the test room, have the dog freely explore the setting for five minutes, off leash. The test room should be about five by six meters. Meanwhile, explain the procedure to the dog owner.
To document the experiment, use four digital video cameras mounted at the four corners of the room. Connect them to a video recording station outside of the test room. The test must be conducted in a specific order beginning with the food choice test.
First, have the owner sit on a chair on one side of the room. Provide the owner with a questionnaire to collect demographic information and set up the test. Put the dog on a leash and tie it to the wall directly opposite the owner.
Then, from the table positioned by the owner, prepare two plates:one with a piece of sausage and one that is empty. Set the plates one meter apart and 1.5 meters from the dog. Then, walk behind the dog and stand behind it while looking at the floor.
Next, ask the owner to crouch down and pick up the empty plate. For five seconds, the owner must now demonstrate to the dog that the plate is interesting and delicious. Then the owner returns to the chair and continues filling out the form.
Now, release the dog and allow it to approach one of the two plates. When the dog has chosen which to approach, pick up the other plate. Then, take hold of the leash and bring the dog back to its starting position.
Now, return both plates to the table and repeat the procedure. Do this a total of six times using the same two plates. To collect tissue samples, have the owner secure the dog in the DNA sample area of the test room.
Explain the technique to the owner, and ask them to treat the dog as they see fit. Then, take a cotton swab sample from the inside of the dog's cheek. Be sure to gently rotate the swab against the tissue.
Take two samples from both sides of the mouth, four samples in all. For the reunion after separation test, have the owner leave the experimental room by door one for three minutes. Meanwhile, allow the dog to move around the room off leash.
After three minutes, ask the owner to enter and pause for five seconds next to the door without interacting with the dog. Then, ask the owner to greet the dog regularly for 30 seconds. Next, have the owner use a rope toy to play tug of war with the dog for 30 seconds.
Instruct the owner to play with the dog as they normally would in everyday play situations. Following tug of war, have the owner put a T-shirt on the dog as follows. Put the dog's head through the head hole, then put each front paw through a sleeve.
And, lastly, tie a knot at the bottom of the shirt on the dog's back. Next, ask the owner to walk around the room ignoring the dog for 30 seconds and then to remove the T-shirt while never speaking to the dog. For the basic commands test, crouch on one side of the room behind a box full of crumpled newspapers.
Have the owner stand on the opposite side of the room and call the dog. The dog and the owner should be facing the doors. During the commands, search for something inside the box to distract the dog.
The owner must first command the dog to sit. Once the dog is sitting, the next command is to lie down. Once the dog lies down, the third command is to stay.
Then the owner must walk to the experimenter and wait for 15 seconds while facing the dog. Lastly, have the owner call the dog and then praise the dog. Next, conduct the teaching test.
Have the owner secure the dog to the wall on a one-meter leash and then walk two meters away to the teaching area. Now, have the owner show the dog how to remove the lid from a bin containing a piece of sausage. First, the owner holds the sausage in one hand and removes the lid with the other.
Next, the owner puts the food into the bin and covers the bin. Lastly, the owner removes the lid and shows the dog the sausage inside. Have the owner repeat this demonstration four times, during which the owner can talk and look at the dog as desired.
Next, conduct the ball play game. Have the owner stand in a specific location, throw a tennis ball across the room, and ask the dog to retrieve the ball as they usually would. Have the owner throw the ball three times.
This concludes the tests. Scoring and analysis of the results is described in the text protocol. 220 border collies'owners were analyzed using the described method.
The mean owner age was 38 years, and the mean dog age was 48 months. 125 of the dogs were females, and 187 of the owners were female. An exploratory factor analysis was performed to discover the factors that most influenced variance.
They were owner warmth, owner social support, and owner control, of which owner warmth was the most influential. Between these three factors, owner warmth and social support correlated positively with each other;whereas, owner control was independent. Owner age correlated negatively with warmth and social support.
However, there was no correlation between owner age and control. These factors were then correlated with dog behavior. For example, when a stranger was within two meters of an owner-dog pair, dogs that would step back towards the owner or remain passive had owners with high warmth factor scores.
By contrast, dogs that would approach the stranger, either in an appeasing/friendly or aggressive manner had owners with low warmth factor scores. Furthermore, the likelihood of a dog showing aggression toward the stranger was higher when owners scored high in owner control and lowers when owners that scored low in owner control. battery of tests can be performed in one hour with one owner dog dyad.
While attempting this procedure, it's really important to remember to make the owner as comfortable as possible in a way that the owner will behave as normally as he would do. After its development of this technique, it allowed researcher in the field of human animal interactions to investigate how owners influence their dog's behavior and the dog human relationship.