The Guilty Look on the Dog’s Face Could be Deceptive
A
guilty looking dog slouching around the house is a common thing observed by dog
owners. Owners are quick to jump to conclusions about the guiltiness of dogs. Latest
research indicates that obviously there is more than what meets the eye in the behavior
of dogs. What we read in the actions of dogs could be contrary to the truth.
Alexandra Horowitz, Assistant Professor from Barnard
College in New York set up a very clever experiment to debunk some of the myths
associated with dogs. In the experiment owners were asked to leave the room after
ordering their dogs not to eat a delectable item of food. While the owners were
away Horowitz gave some of the dogs this item of food before inviting the
owners back into the room. In some trials the owners were told that the dog has
eaten the food while others were told that their dogs had behaved as ordered.
What was told to the owners was not exactly what had transpired. In some cases
dogs that had behaved well were pointed out as guilty.
The experiment
conclusively proved that the "guilty look" had little to do with
whether the dogs had actually eaten the food or not. Dogs looked most “guilty”
if they were chastised by their owners for eating the food. The dogs that had
been obedient and had not eaten the food, but were reprimanded by their owners,
looked more “guilty” than those that had, in fact, eaten the food. This proved
that the dog’s guilty look is a response to the owner’s behavior, and not
necessarily a response to its own misdeeds.
The full details of the research appears in the
recently published "Canine Behaviour and Cognition" Special Issue of
Elsevier's Behavioural Processes
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