Abstract

Empathy covers a wide range of phenomena varying according to the degree of cognitive complexity involved; ranging from emotional contagion, defined as the sharing of others’ emotional states, to sympathetic concern requiring animals to have an appraisal of the others’ situation and showing concern-like behaviors. While most studies have investigated how animals reacted in response to conspecifics’ distress, dogs so far have mainly been targeted to examine cross-species empathic responses. To investigate whether dogs would respond with empathy-like behavior also to conspecifics, we adopted a playback method using conspecifics’ vocalizations (whines) recorded during a distressful event as well as control sounds. Our subjects were first exposed to a playback phase where they were subjected either to a control sound, a familiar whine (from their familiar partner) or a stranger whine stimulus (from a stranger dog), and then a reunion phase where the familiar partner entered the room. When exposed to whines, dogs showed a higher behavioral alertness and exhibited more stress-related behaviors compared to when exposed to acoustically similar control sounds. Moreover, they demonstrated more comfort-offering behaviors toward their familiar partners following whine playbacks than after control stimuli. Furthermore, when looking at the first session, this comfort offering was biased towards the familiar partner when subjects were previously exposed to the familiar compared to the stranger whines. Finally, familiar whine stimuli tended to maintain higher cortisol levels while stranger whines did not. To our knowledge, these results are the first to suggest that dogs can experience and demonstrate “empathic-like” responses to conspecifics’ distress-calls.

Highlights

  • Numerous studies have shown that animals display a sweep of emotions such as fear, anxiety, frustration, pain and pleasure [1,2,3]

  • Results a) Dogs’ reaction to the control and whine stimuli During the playback phase, we found that the type of stimulus had an effect on both duration of dogs’ gaze towards the speaker (LMM: F(1, 29) = 10.08, p = 0.003) and the time dogs spent in proximity of the opaque fence (LMM: F(1, 31) = 5.476, p = 0.026,)

  • The amount of time dogs spent gazing at the owner (LMM: F(1, 31) = 0.001, p = 0.97), staying in proximity of the owner (LMM: F(1, 31) = 0.53, p = 0.47) as well as the variation in salivary cortisol level from before to after the playback (LMM: F(1, 27) = 0.003, p = 0.95) did not differ between conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous studies have shown that animals display a sweep of emotions such as fear, anxiety, frustration, pain and pleasure [1,2,3]. While several studies have demonstrated that some non-human primate [4,5,6,7,8] and non-primate species [9,10,11] are capable of recognizing others’ emotions, it is still an ongoing debate whether animals are able to share others’ emotions and experience a form of empathy. Investigating Empathy-Like Responding to Conspecifics' Distress in Pet Dogs. Decision to publish, or preparation of the Technology Funds (WWTF), No CS11-005

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