Analyze Diet

Topic:Emotions

The study of emotions in horses involves understanding the behavioral, physiological, and psychological responses of horses to various stimuli. Emotions in horses can be inferred through observable behaviors, such as vocalizations, body language, and interactions with their environment and other animals. Physiological indicators, including heart rate, cortisol levels, and other stress-related biomarkers, are also used to assess emotional states. This research area explores how emotions affect horse welfare, training outcomes, and human-animal interactions. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine the identification, measurement, and implications of emotional states in horses.
Self-Management Intervention for Attention and Executive Functions Using Equine-Assisted Occupational Therapy Among Children Aged 6-14 Diagnosed with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder.
Journal of alternative and complementary medicine (New York, N.Y.)    January 14, 2020   Volume 26, Issue 3 239-246 doi: 10.1089/acm.2019.0374
Gilboa Y, Helmer A. Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), characterized by inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity, is currently one of the most common diagnoses given to children. Children with ADHD have a unique cognitive profile that involves difficulties in executive functions (EFs) and in the self-management system of the brain, and are at higher risk for educational failure, social and emotional difficulties, and high risk behavior. The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of self-management intervention for attention and executive functions using equine-assisted occupatio...
Could snorts inform us on how horses perceive riding?
Behavioural processes    January 7, 2020   Volume 172 104041 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2020.104041
Stomp M, Masson A, Henry S, Hausberger M, Lesimple C.Several previous studies have shown that working conditions (including riding) can induce stress in horses. Riders' actions and postures, when inappropriate, induce stress and conflict behaviours during riding and welfare impairment and negative emotional states outside work. Optimistic biases have been found in leisure horses, which, amongst positive management factors, were ridden with loose reins and low hands. Thus, one can wonder whether horses may positively perceive work or parts of it. Indicators of positive emotions are poorly known yet but we recently found that, out of the working c...
Responses to death and dying: primates and other mammals.
Primates; journal of primatology    January 7, 2020   Volume 61, Issue 1 1-7 doi: 10.1007/s10329-019-00786-1
Anderson JR.Although some definitions of thanatology-broadly definable as the study of death and dying-exclude nonhumans as subjects, recognition of the scientific value of studying how other species respond to sick, injured, dying and dead conspecifics appears to be growing. And whereas earlier literature was largely characterized by anecdotal descriptions and sometimes fanciful interpretations, we now see more rigorous and often quantitative analysis of various behaviors displayed towards conspecifics (and sometimes heterospecifics) at various stages of incapacitation, including death. Studies of social...
Improving the Recognition of Equine Affective States.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 11, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 12 doi: 10.3390/ani9121124
Bell C, Rogers S, Taylor J, Busby D.A key welfare problem for horses is that people commonly fail to recognise, and consequently neglect to resolve, equine behavioural signs of distress, worsening the welfare of the horse and potentially putting the safety of the handler at risk as a result. Members of equestrian Facebook groups were asked to view six videos and assess the horse's behaviour in each; the authors selected the videos and considered each video to demonstrate behaviour associated with negative affective states. An additional six equine behaviourists also completed the survey as an "expert comparison group" from whom ...
Emotional Transfer in Human-Horse Interaction: New Perspectives on Equine Assisted Interventions.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    November 26, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 12 1030 doi: 10.3390/ani9121030
Equine assisted interventions (EAIs) include all therapeutic interventions aimed at improving human wellbeing through the involvement of horses. Due to the prominent emotional involvement traditionally characterizing their relation with humans, horses developed sophisticated communicative skills, which fostered their ability to respond to human emotional states. In this review, we hypothesize that the proximate causation of successful interventions could be human-animal mutual coordination, through which the subjects bodily and, most importantly, emotionally come into contact. We propose that ...
Changes in Saliva Analytes Correlate with Horses’ Behavioural Reactions to An Acute Stressor: A Pilot Study.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    November 18, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 11 993 doi: 10.3390/ani9110993
Contreras-Aguilar MD, Henry S, Coste C, Tecles F, Escribano D, Cerón JJ, Hausberger M.Acute stress induces an array of behavioural reactions in horses that vary between individuals. Attempts to relate behavioural patterns and physiological responses have not always given clear-cut results. Here, we measured the changes in a panel of salivary components: salivary alpha-amylase (sAA), lipase, total esterase (TEA), butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), adenosine deaminase (ADA), and cortisol, and their potential link with horses' behaviours after acute stress. Saliva samples were collected in nine riding horses subjected to a test consisting of opening an umbrella. Saliva sampling was obt...
Horses Categorize Human Emotions Cross-Modally Based on Facial Expression and Non-Verbal Vocalizations.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    October 24, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 11 862 doi: 10.3390/ani9110862
Trösch M, Cuzol F, Parias C, Calandreau L, Nowak R, Lansade L.Over the last few years, an increasing number of studies have aimed to gain more insight into the field of animal emotions. In particular, it is of interest to determine whether animals can cross-modally categorize the emotions of others. For domestic animals that share a close relationship with humans, we might wonder whether this cross-modal recognition of emotions extends to humans, as well. In this study, we tested whether horses could recognize human emotions and attribute the emotional valence of visual (facial expression) and vocal (non-verbal vocalization) stimuli to the same perceptua...
[Euthanasia in horses – Results of a survey addressing horse owners and veterinarians].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    October 21, 2019   Volume 47, Issue 5 286-293 doi: 10.1055/a-0975-8643
Gehlen H, Loschelder J, Walther M.Euthanasia represents a procedure with high responsibility for veterinarians in equine practice. The procedure should avoid pain and suffering for the horse and be carried out with the least possible stress for the patient and its owner. The presented study investigated the emotional impact of a horse's euthanasia procedure on the owner in order to enable development of future recommendations in improving the management of this procedure in horses. Methods: Questionnaires concerning euthanasia of a horse for horse owners and veterinarians, respectively were developed and sent by mail or publis...
The Nguudu Barndimanmanha Project-Improving Social and Emotional Wellbeing in Aboriginal Youth Through Equine Assisted Learning.
Frontiers in public health    October 10, 2019   Volume 7 278 doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00278
Coffin J.Background: Recent statistics have painted a grim picture for Australia's Aboriginal youth, with reports of higher levels of almost every health indicator, including depression, sexual and emotional abuse, unemployment, and incarceration. Traditional western based therapies have proven to have limited effectiveness in engaging this group as they can often be culturally inappropriate. International studies have provided promising results using equine assisted learning, with a sound methodological basis underpinned by Indigenous ways of being and doing. In Australia Aboriginal people have strong...
Mutual interactions between cognition and welfare: The horse as an animal model.
Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews    September 3, 2019   Volume 107 540-559 doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2019.08.022
Hausberger M, Stomp M, Sankey C, Brajon S, Lunel C, Henry S.Research in cognitive psychology has repeatedly shown how much cognition and emotions are mutually related to one another. Psychological disorders are associated with cognitive (attention, memory and judgment) biases and chronic pain may affect attention, learning or memory. Laboratory studies have provided useful insights about the processes involved but observations about spontaneous animal models, living in different stress/welfare conditions may help understand further how cognition and welfare are interrelated in the « real world ». Domestic horses constitute such a model as they live i...
Are Horses (Equus caballus) Sensitive to Human Emotional Cues?
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    August 29, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 9 630 doi: 10.3390/ani9090630
Baba C, Kawai M, Takimoto-Inose A.Emotions are important for social animals because animals' emotions function as beneficial cues to identify valuable resources such as food or to avoid danger by providing environmental information. Emotions also enable animals to predict individuals' behavior and determine how to behave in a specific context. Recently, several studies have reported that dogs are highly sensitive to not only conspecific but also human emotional cues. These studies suggest that domestication may have affected such sensitivity. However, there are still few studies that examine whether other domesticated animals,...
Horses associate individual human voices with the valence of past interactions: a behavioural and electrophysiological study.
Scientific reports    August 9, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 1 11568 doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-47960-5
Brain lateralization is a phenomenon widely reported in the animal kingdom and sensory laterality has been shown to be an indicator of the appraisal of the stimulus valence by an individual. This can prove a useful tool to investigate how animals perceive intra- or hetero-specific signals. The human-animal relationship provides an interesting framework for testing the impact of the valence of interactions on emotional memories. In the present study, we tested whether horses could associate individual human voices with past positive or negative experiences. Both behavioural and electroencephalo...
The Impact of Equine-Assisted Therapy on Equine Behavioral and Physiological Responses.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    July 1, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 7 409 doi: 10.3390/ani9070409
Mendonça T, Bienboire-Frosini C, Menuge F, Leclercq J, Lafont-Lecuelle C, Arroub S, Pageat P.Equine-assisted therapies (EATs) have been widely used in the treatment of patients with mental or physical conditions. However, studies on the influence of equine-assisted therapy (EAT) on equine welfare are very recent, and the need for further research is often highlighted. The aim of this study was to investigate whether EAT creates negative or positive emotions in horses, and the influence of patients' expectations (one group of patients had physical and psychological expectations and one group of patients had only psychological expectations) on horses' emotional responses. Fifty-eight pa...
An Exploration of the Mechanism of Action of an Equine-Assisted Intervention.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    May 31, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 6 303 doi: 10.3390/ani9060303
Hemingway A, Carter S, Callaway A, Kavanagh E, Ellis S.Though long alluded to, there is now an accumulation of evidence of the vital contribution that emotion makes to learning. Within this broad advance in understanding is a growing body of research emphasising the embodied nature of this emotion-based learning. The study presented here is a pilot study using a mixed-method approach (combining both physiological and experiential methodologies) to give a picture of the "emotional landscape" of people's learning through the intervention under study. This has allowed researchers to examine mediating pathways that may underlie any effects of an equin...
Sex and Age Don’t Matter, but Breed Type Does-Factors Influencing Eye Wrinkle Expression in Horses.
Frontiers in veterinary science    May 29, 2019   Volume 6 154 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00154
Schanz L, Krueger K, Hintze S.Identifying valid indicators to assess animals' emotional states is a critical objective of animal welfare science. In horses, eye wrinkles above the eyeball have been shown to be affected by pain and other emotional states. From other species we know that individual characteristics, e.g., age in humans, affect facial wrinkles, but it has not yet been investigated whether eye wrinkle expression in horses is systematically affected by such characteristics. Therefore, the aim of this study was to assess how age, sex, breed type, body condition, and coat colour affect the expression and/or the as...
Testing for Behavioral and Physiological Responses of Domestic Horses (Equus caballus) Across Different Contexts – Consistency Over Time and Effects of Context.
Frontiers in psychology    April 18, 2019   Volume 10 849 doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00849
Safryghin A, Hebesberger DV, Wascher CAF.In a number of species, consistent behavioral differences between individuals have been described in standardized tests, e.g., novel object, open field test. Different behavioral expressions are reflective of different coping strategies of individuals in stressful situations. A causal link between behavioral responses and the activation of the physiological stress response is assumed but not thoroughly studied. Also, most standard paradigms investigating individual behavioral differences are framed in a fearful context, therefore the present study aimed to add a test in a more positive context...
PETting horses?
Equine veterinary journal    April 6, 2019   Volume 51, Issue 3 283-284 doi: 10.1111/evj.13077
Spriet M.No abstract available
The Impact of Equine Therapy and an Audio-Visual Approach Emphasizing Rhythm and Beat Perception in Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder.
Journal of alternative and complementary medicine (New York, N.Y.)    February 21, 2019   Volume 25, Issue 5 535-541 doi: 10.1089/acm.2017.0242
Hession CE, Law Smith MJ, Watterson D, Oxley N, Murphy BA. This study aims to investigate the impact of a therapeutic horse riding (HR) intervention and an audiovisual (AV) intervention comprising exposure to equine rhythm and motion on developmental parameters of children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). The study design was a pretest/post-test. The study took place in three locations across Ireland-St. Michael's Boys School in Mervue, Co Galway, The Hunt Museum in Limerick City, Co. Limerick, and Fettercairn Youth Horse Project in Tallaght, Co. Dublin. Eighty-three children (6-14 years) with a primary diagnosis of DCD. Children m...
Farm Animal Cognition-Linking Behavior, Welfare and Ethics.
Frontiers in veterinary science    February 12, 2019   Volume 6 24 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00024
Nawroth C, Langbein J, Coulon M, Gabor V, Oesterwind S, Benz-Schwarzburg J, von Borell E.Farm animal welfare is a major concern for society and food production. To more accurately evaluate animal farming in general and to avoid exposing farm animals to poor welfare situations, it is necessary to understand not only their behavioral but also their cognitive needs and capacities. Thus, general knowledge of how farm animals perceive and interact with their environment is of major importance for a range of stakeholders, from citizens to politicians to cognitive ethologists to philosophers. This review aims to outline the current state of farm animal cognition research and focuses on u...
Perfect Riders: Personality, Perfectionism, and Mental Health in Norwegian Competition Riders.
Journal of equine veterinary science    February 6, 2019   Volume 75 82-89 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2019.01.016
Træen B, Finstad KS, Røysamb E.The purpose of the study was to elucidate the relationship between personality traits, perfectionism, and mental health (self-efficacy, positive emotions) among competition riders. Data were collected by online questionnaires among 662 licensed competition riders in Norway. The results showed that riders who were high on conscientiousness and low on neuroticism had better mental health than other riders. Self-oriented perfectionism predicted mental health and mediated partly the associations between personality traits and mental health. Socially prescribed perfectionism had no association with...
Why Should Human-Animal Interactions Be Included in Research of Working Equids’ Welfare?
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 30, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 2 42 doi: 10.3390/ani9020042
Luna D, Tadich TA.The livelihood of working horses' owners and their families is intimately linked to the welfare of their equids. A proper understanding of human-animal interactions, as well as the main factors that modulate them, is essential for establishing strategies oriented to improve the welfare of animals and their caretakers. To date, there is still a paucity of research dedicated to the identification and assessment of the human psychological attributes that affect the owner⁻equine interaction, and how these could affect the welfare of working equids. However, some studies have shown that empathy, ...
Austrian Veterinarians’ Attitudes to Euthanasia in Equine Practice.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 30, 2019   Volume 9, Issue 2 44 doi: 10.3390/ani9020044
Springer S, Jenner F, Tichy A, Grimm H.Euthanasia of companion animals is a challenging responsibility in the veterinary profession since veterinarians have to consider not only medical, but also legal, economic, emotional, social, and ethical factors in decision-making. To this end; an anonymous questionnaire-based survey of Austrian equine veterinarians examines the attitudes to the euthanasia of equine patients in a range of scenarios; to identify factors which may influence decisions on the ending of a horse's life. This paper describes the distributions of demographic and attitude variables. Mann-Whitney U tests were used to t...
Use of Music Therapy in Aiding the Relaxation of Geriatric Horses.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 21, 2018   Volume 78 89-93 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2018.12.011
Wiśniewska M, Janczarek I, Wilk I, Wnuk-Pawlak E.The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of music therapy on changes in the level of parameters describing heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) as excitability indicators in geriatric horses. The study involved 20 warmblood geriatric horses, aged 20 years or more. Animals were kept in two identical stables in one facility. Horses from stable No. 1 were considered the experimental group, whereas horses from stable No. 2 constituted a control group. The experiment consisted in playing relaxation new age music to the horses in the experimental group for 28 days use special so...
Adolescents’ Affective and Physiological Regulation Shape Negative Behavior During Challenging Equine Assisted Learning Activities.
Frontiers in veterinary science    December 4, 2018   Volume 5 300 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00300
Pendry P, Carr AM, Vandagriff JL.This study examined associations between adolescents' ( = 59; = 11.63) diurnal and momentary activity of the Hypothalamic Pituitary Adrenal (HPA) axis as marked by salivary cortisol, and affective and behavioral responses to their first, mounted equine assisted learning (EAL) activity. The introduction to riding occurred during the fifth week of an 11-week EAL program for at-risk and typically developing adolescents. Before the 11-week program began, participants collected 6 salivary cortisol samples at prescribed times (wakeup, 4 p.m., bedtime) over 2 days, from which indices of diurnal cor...
Physiological outcomes of calming behaviors support the resilience hypothesis in horses.
Scientific reports    November 30, 2018   Volume 8, Issue 1 17501 doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-35561-7
Scopa C, Palagi E, Sighieri C, Baragli P.To manage a stressful stimulus animals react both behaviorally and physiologically to restore the homeostasis. In stable horses, a stressful stimulus can be represented by social separation, riding discomfort or the presence of novel objects in their environment. Although Heart Rate Variability is a common indicator of stress levels in horses, the behavioral mechanisms concurrently occurring under stressful conditions are still unknown. The sudden inflation of a balloon was administered to 33 horses. Video-recording of self-directed behaviors (snore, vacuum chewing, snort, head/body shaking) a...
Evidence for Right-Sided Horses Being More Optimistic than Left-Sided Horses.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    November 22, 2018   Volume 8, Issue 12 219 doi: 10.3390/ani8120219
Marr I, Farmer K, Krüger K.An individual's positive or negative perspective when judging an ambiguous stimulus (cognitive bias) can be helpful when assessing animal welfare. Emotionality, as expressed in approach or withdrawal behaviour, is linked to brain asymmetry. The predisposition to process information in the left or right brain hemisphere is displayed in motor laterality. The quality of the information being processed is indicated by the sensory laterality. Consequently, it would be quicker and more repeatable to use motor or sensory laterality to evaluate cognitive bias than to perform the conventional judgment ...
A Case for the Interspecies Transfer of Emotions: A Preliminary Investigation on How Humans Odors Modify Reactions of the Autonomic Nervous System in Horses. Lanata A, Nardelli M, Valenza G, Baragli P, DrAniello B, Alterisio A, Scandurra A, Semin GR, Scilingo EP.We examined the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) activity of horses in response to human body odors (BOs) produced under happy and fear states. The ANS response of horses was analyzed in terms of Heart Rate Variability (HRV) features extracted in the frequency domain. Our results revealed that human BOs induce sympathetic and parasympathetic changes and stimulate horses emotionally, suggesting interspecies transfer of emotions via BOs. These preliminary findings open the way to measure changes in horse's ANS dynamics in response to human internal states via human BOs, and allow us to better unde...
Efficacy of equine-assisted psychotherapy in veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder.
Journal of integrative medicine    November 16, 2018   Volume 17, Issue 1 14-19 doi: 10.1016/j.joim.2018.11.001
Burton LE, Qeadan F, Burge MR.Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common and debilitating disorder among war veterans. Although complementary and alternative therapies are gaining acceptance in the treatment of PTSD, the efficacy of animal-based therapies in this disorder is unknown. The goal of equine-assisted psychotherapy (EAP) is to improve the social, emotional, and/or cognitive functions of individuals with PTSD. Objective: This study aims to explore the effects of EAP on PTSD symptoms. We hypothesized that veterans with PTSD who participate in a standardized EAP program for 1 h per week for 6 weeks would exp...
Reliability and Validity Assessment of the Observation of Human-Animal Interaction for Research (OHAIRE) Behavior Coding Tool.
Frontiers in veterinary science    November 8, 2018   Volume 5 268 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00268
Guérin NA, Gabriels RL, Germone MM, Schuck SEB, Traynor A, Thomas KM, McKenzie SJ, Slaughter V, O'Haire ME.The Observation of Human-Animal Interaction for Research (OHAIRE) is a coding tool developed to capture the behavior of children when interacting with social partners and animals in naturalistic settings. The OHAIRE behavioral categories of focus are emotional displays, social communication behaviors toward adults and peers, behaviors directed toward animals or experimental control objects, and interfering behaviors. To date, the OHAIRE has been used by 14 coders to code 2,732 min of video across four studies with a total of 201 participants ages 5 to 18 years ( = 10.1, = 2.5). Studies involv...
Memories of emotional expressions in horses.
Learning & behavior    October 20, 2018   Volume 47, Issue 3 191-192 doi: 10.3758/s13420-018-0363-9
Amici F.Proops, Grounds, Smith, and McComb (2018) suggest that horses remember previous emotional expressions of specific humans, and use these memories to adjust their behavior in future social interactions. Despite some methodological shortcomings, this study raises important questions on the complexity of social interactions in nonhuman animals, which surely deserve further attention.
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