October 11, 2022

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Pet parenting style influences dog behavior, study finds

Credit: Oregon State University
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Credit: Oregon State University

Dogs with owners who have high expectations and are highly responsive to their dog's behavior and needs are more social, more secure when away from their owners and more persistent problem solvers, an Oregon State University study found.

"We found that pet parenting style does predict patterns of dog behavior and cognition," said Monique Udell, an associate professor at Oregon State and an expert on dog behavior. "This an important finding because it suggests that who take the time to understand and meet their dog's needs are more likely to end up with secure, resilient dogs."

The behavior and cognition of dogs have drawn increasing scientific interest during the past several decades, with a lot of research focused on how dog behavior is influenced by the home environment and prior experiences of the dog.

Now researchers are beginning to study the bond owners have with their dogs and how this influences dog behavior. Many pet care companies have picked up on this bond and are now marketing their products to "pet parents" instead of .

In many ways, research on human-dog relationships parallels human psychology research, said Lauren Brubaker, a co-author of the paper who earned her doctorate in 2019 while working in Udell's lab.

Parenting is considered an important factor in a child's development and has been found to influence many things, including , intellectual success, , attachment and job performance, said Brubaker, who now works as a behavioral scientist.

The researchers' study, recently published in the journal Animal Cognition, is one of the first to look at how the quality of a human-dog relationship may influence a dog's performance on behavioral and cognitive tests.

For the study, Udell and Brubaker recruited 48 dog owners and gave them a pet parenting style survey. Using the , dog owners were divided into three categories, which are similar to those used in human parenting research: authoritative (high expectations, high responsiveness), authoritarian (high expectations, low responsiveness) and permissive (low expectations, low responsiveness.)

The dogs were then brought to Udell's Human-Animal Interaction Lab, where they participated in three behavioral tests.

The first test evaluated the dogs' attachment to their owner. First, the owner and the dog were situated in the same room, with the owner interacting with the dog when it came close. Then the owner left the room and finally returned, reuniting with the dog.

The second tested sociability by having the owner and an unfamiliar person in the room with the dog and studying the interactions.

The third test involved the dog attempting to get a treat from a puzzle with different levels of help from the owner.

The researchers' findings included:

"This research shows that the pet dog-human caretaker bond may be functionally and emotionally similar to the bond between a human parent and their child," Brubaker said.

More information: Lauren Brubaker et al, Does Pet Parenting Style predict the social and problem-solving behavior of pet dogs (Canis lupus familiaris)?, Animal Cognition (2022). DOI: 10.1007/s10071-022-01694-6

Journal information: Animal Cognition

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