This study aimed at a) characterizing problematic behaviors expressed by dogs during walks in urban areas, b) assessing how owners and non-owners perceive the phenomenon, and c) evaluating if such problematic behaviors are associated with peculiar dog-owner attention patterns. Of 176 dogs filmed, seven expressed excitement, ten avoidance and five aggression. Owners of problematic dogs considered their dogs less reliable and declared paying higher attention to them than owners of non-problematic dogs. However, no difference was found in the perceived expression of problematic behaviors and in actual attention levels. This suggests that, while somehow aware of their dogs’ particular need for attention, problematic dog owners are incapable of complying appropriately with such requirement. Non-owners perceived owners as less attentive and dogs as less reliable than what perceived by owners, but reported a similar occurrence of problematic behaviors. As for problematic dogs, their levels of attention to owners were not different from those of non-problematic dogs. Aggressive dogs were the only ones in which attention levels varied significantly during the problematic behavior, as they never looked at their owner during the aggression episodes. Avoidant dogs showed a trend for increased frequency of gazes to the owner during avoidance episodes, suggesting an attempt to establish communication with the owner, although the short duration of gazes may question their efficacy. While we cannot provide a detailed analysis of factors that contribute to dogs problematic behaviors in public, we identify a crucial point in the owners’ lack of awareness and inability to deal with them.

Attention of dogs and owners in urban contexts: public perception and problematic behaviors

MONGILLO, PAOLO;ADAMELLI, SERENA;PITTERI, ELISA;MARINELLI, LIETA
2015

Abstract

This study aimed at a) characterizing problematic behaviors expressed by dogs during walks in urban areas, b) assessing how owners and non-owners perceive the phenomenon, and c) evaluating if such problematic behaviors are associated with peculiar dog-owner attention patterns. Of 176 dogs filmed, seven expressed excitement, ten avoidance and five aggression. Owners of problematic dogs considered their dogs less reliable and declared paying higher attention to them than owners of non-problematic dogs. However, no difference was found in the perceived expression of problematic behaviors and in actual attention levels. This suggests that, while somehow aware of their dogs’ particular need for attention, problematic dog owners are incapable of complying appropriately with such requirement. Non-owners perceived owners as less attentive and dogs as less reliable than what perceived by owners, but reported a similar occurrence of problematic behaviors. As for problematic dogs, their levels of attention to owners were not different from those of non-problematic dogs. Aggressive dogs were the only ones in which attention levels varied significantly during the problematic behavior, as they never looked at their owner during the aggression episodes. Avoidant dogs showed a trend for increased frequency of gazes to the owner during avoidance episodes, suggesting an attempt to establish communication with the owner, although the short duration of gazes may question their efficacy. While we cannot provide a detailed analysis of factors that contribute to dogs problematic behaviors in public, we identify a crucial point in the owners’ lack of awareness and inability to deal with them.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3104699
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