Abstract
Simple SummaryThus far, little attention has been paid to interspecific odour communication of emotions, and no studies have examined whether humans are able to recognise animal emotions from body odour. Thus, the aim of the present study was to address this question. Body odour samples were collected from 16 two-year-old thoroughbred horses in fear and non-fear situations, respectively. The horse odour samples were then assessed by 73 human odour raters. We found that humans, as a group, were able to correctly assign whether horse odour samples were collected under a fear- or a non-fear condition, respectively. An open question remains, which is whether humans could simply distinguish between little versus much sweat and between high intensity versus low intensity or were able to recognise horses’ fear and non-fear emotions. To conclude, the present results indicate that olfaction might contribute to the human recognition of horse emotions. However, these results should be addressed with caution in light of the study’s limitations and only viewed as exploratory for future studies.Mammalian body odour conveys cues about an individual’s emotional state that can be recognised by conspecifics. Thus far, little attention has been paid to interspecific odour communication of emotions, and no studies have examined whether humans are able to recognise animal emotions from body odour. Thus, the aim of the present study was to address this question. Body odour samples were collected from 16 two-year-old thoroughbred horses in fear and non-fear situations, respectively. The horse odour samples were then assessed by 73 human odour raters. We found that humans, as a group, were able to correctly assign whether horse odour samples were collected under a fear- or a non-fear condition, respectively. Furthermore, they perceived the body odour of horses collected under the fear condition as more intense, compared with the non-fear condition. An open question remains, which is whether humans could simply distinguish between little versus much sweat and between high intensity versus low intensity or were able to recognise horses’ fear and non-fear emotions. These results appear to fit the notion that the ability to recognise emotions in other species may present an advantage to both the sender and the receiver of emotional cues, particularly in the interaction between humans and domesticated animals. To conclude, the present results indicate that olfaction might contribute to the human recognition of horse emotions. However, these results should be addressed with caution in light of the study’s limitations and only viewed as exploratory for future studies.
Highlights
Olfactory communication via chemosignals is one of the most common ways in which animals convey information between conspecifics [1]
The horses took part in a 20 min racing training. Since it was one of their first training, we expected that the horses might experience fear due to the stress related to carrying a rider and taking part in a race
The results of the present study show that humans, as a group, were able to correctly assign whether horse odour samples were collected under a fear- or a non-fear condition, respectively
Summary
Olfactory communication via chemosignals is one of the most common ways in which animals convey information between conspecifics [1]. The natural body odour of animals and humans consists of a wide range of volatile compounds [2] that carry a variety of information. This information has been shown to play an important role in human (Homo sapiens) non-verbal communication [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Body odour conveys cues that are essential for intraspecific social communication (for animals, see [1]; for humans, see [10]) This includes information about the emotional state of a conspecific (for non-human animals, see [11]; for humans, see [12]). In a more recent study, Krueger and Flauger [19] found that horses spent most time sniffing the faeces of conspecifics from which they received the highest amount of aggressive behaviour
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