Abstract

The importance of dogs (Canis familiaris) in sleep research is primarily based on their comparability with humans. In spite of numerous differences, dogs' comparable sleep pattern, as well as several phenotypic similarities on both the behavioural and neural levels, make this species a most feasible model in many respects. Our aim was to investigate whether the so-called first-night effect, which in humans manifests as a marked macrostructure difference between the first and second sleep occasions, can be observed in family dogs. We used a non-invasive polysomnographic method to monitor and compare the characteristics of dogs' (N=24) 3-hr-long afternoon naps on three occasions at the same location. We analysed how sleep macrostructure variables differed between the first, second and third occasions, considering also the effects of potential confounding variables such as the dogs' age and sleeping habits. Our findings indicate that first-night effect is present in dogs' sleep architecture, although its specifics somewhat deviate from the pattern observed in humans. Sleep macrostructure differences were mostly found between occasions 1 and 3; dogs slept more, had less wake after the first drowsiness episode, and reached drowsiness sleep earlier on occasion 3. Dogs, which had been reported to sleep rarely not at home, had an earlier non-rapid eye movement sleep, a shorter rapid eye movementsleep latency, and spent more time in rapid eye movement sleepon occasion 3, compared with occasion 1. Extending prior dog sleep data, these results help increase the validity of further sleep electroencephalography investigations in dogs.

Highlights

  • The dog (Canis familiaris) has been proved to be an interesting and valid animal model of human socio-cognitive skills not just at the behavioural level (Miklósi & Topál, 2013), and in the area of neurocognitive research, including sleep-related cognition (Bunford, Andics, Kis, Miklósi, & Gácsi, 2017)

  • Extending prior dog sleep data, these results help increase the validity of further sleep electroencephalography investigations in dogs

  • Dogs' sleep habits had an occasion-specific effect on sleep efficiency (F2,65 = 3.655, p = .031): often sleeping away from home (OSAH) dogs slept more during occasion 1 compared with rarely sleeping away from home (RSAH) dogs (p = .016; Figure 6)

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Summary

Introduction

The dog (Canis familiaris) has been proved to be an interesting and valid animal model of human socio-cognitive skills not just at the behavioural level (Miklósi & Topál, 2013), and in the area of neurocognitive research, including sleep-related cognition (Bunford, Andics, Kis, Miklósi, & Gácsi, 2017). A somewhat independent line of research investigates the characteristics of the dogs' sleep, mainly building on the fact that the general architecture of human sleep is better approximated by dog sleep, and not by the most commonly used laboratory animals (Toth & Bhargava, 2013). A non-invasive polysomnography (PSG) method has been developed to investigate the sleep architecture of family dogs (Kis, Szakadát, Kovács, et al, 2014), which has been successfully used to monitor natural sleep in dogs as a function of pre-sleep experiences and/or individual differences (Bunford et al, 2018; Kis, Gergely, et al, 2017; Kis, Szakadát, et al, 2017)

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