This will not surprise most dog owners: Dogs can act jealous, finds a new study from the University of California, San Diego. Darwin thought so, too. But emotion researchers have been arguing for years whether
jealousy1 requires complex cognition. And some scientists have even said that jealousy is an
entirely2 social construct -- not seen in all human cultures and not fundamental or hard-wired in the same ways that fear and anger are. The current study -- published in PLOS ONE by UC San Diego
psychology3 professor Christine Harris and former honors student Caroline Prouvost -- is the first experimental test of jealous behaviors in dogs. The findings support the view that there may be a more basic form of jealousy, which evolved to protect social bonds from
interlopers(闯入者).
Harris and Prouvost show that dogs exhibit more jealous behaviors, like
snapping(猛咬的) and pushing at their owner or the rival, when the owner showed affection to what appeared to be another dog (actually a stuffed dog that barked,
whined4 and wagged its tail). Dogs exhibited these behaviors more than if the same affection was showered on a novel object and much more than when the owner's attention was simply diverted by reading a book.
"Our study suggests not only that dogs do engage in what appear to be jealous behaviors but also that they were seeking to break up the connection between the owner and a seeming rival," Harris said. "We can't really speak to the dogs'
subjective5 experiences, of course, but it looks as though they were motivated to protect an important social relationship."
Since there had been no prior experiments on dog jealousy, the researchers adapted a test used with 6-month-old human infants. They worked with 36 dogs in their own homes and videotaped the owners ignoring them in favor of a stuffed,
animated6 dog or a jack-o-lantern pail. In both these conditions, the owners were instructed to treat the objects as though they were real dogs -- petting them, talking to them sweetly, etc. In the third
scenario7, the owners were asked to read aloud a pop-up book that played melodies. Two independent raters then coded the videos for a variety of aggressive, disruptive and attention-seeking behaviors.
Dogs were about twice as likely to push or touch the owner when the owner was interacting with the faux(假的) dog (78 percent) as when the owner was attending to the pail (42 percent). Even fewer (22 percent) did this in the book condition. About 30 percent of the dogs also tried to get between their owner and the stuffed animal. And while 25 percent snapped at the "other dog," only one did so at the pail and book.
Did the dogs believe the stuffed animal was a real rival? Harris and Prouvost write that their
aggression8 suggests they did. They also cite as additional evidence that 86 percent of the dogs
sniffed9 the toy dog's rear end during the experiment or post-experiment phase.