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.
Improving adolescent social competence and behavior: a randomized trial of an 11-week equine facilitated learning prevention program.
The journal of primary prevention    June 6, 2014   Volume 35, Issue 4 281-293 doi: 10.1007/s10935-014-0350-7
Pendry P, Carr AM, Smith AN, Roeter SM.There is growing evidence that promoting social competence in youth is an effective strategy to prevent mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders in adulthood. Research suggests that programs delivered in collaboration with schools are particularly effective when they target social and emotional skill building, utilize an interactive instructional style, provide opportunities for youth participation and self-direction, and include explicit attempts to enhance youth social competence. A relatively new but popular approach that incorporates these characteristics is human animal interaction, wh...
Influence of emotional balance during a learning and recall test in horses (Equus caballus).
Behavioural processes    May 27, 2014   Volume 106 141-150 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2014.05.004
Mengoli M, Pageat P, Lafont-Lecuelle C, Monneret P, Giacalone A, Sighieri C, Cozzi A.Modern day horse-human relationships entail different types of sport and riding activities, which all require learning. In evaluating the interaction between learning and emotions, studying normal coping strategies or adaptive responses to the surroundings is critical. 34 horses were involved in a cognitive test, in the absence of physical effort, to analyze performance, as well as physiological and behavioral responses related to learning, memorization and recall, associated to the capacity to reverse a learned model. Synthetic Equine Appeasing Pheromone (EAP) was used in 17 horses in order t...
Effects of equine assisted activities on autism spectrum disorder.
Journal of autism and developmental disorders    February 15, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 8 1897-1907 doi: 10.1007/s10803-014-2062-5
Lanning BA, Baier ME, Ivey-Hatz J, Krenek N, Tubbs JD.Quality of life assessments were used in this study to determine the behavioral changes of children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) who participated in equine assisted activities. Behavioral changes of children with ASD participating in 9 weeks of equines assisted activities (EAA) (N = 10) were compared to behavioral changes of children who participated in a non-equine intervention (N = 8). Parents noted significant improvements in their child's physical, emotional and social functioning following the first 6 weeks of EAA. The children participating in the non-equine program also...
Visual attention, an indicator of human-animal relationships? A study of domestic horses (Equus caballus).
Frontiers in psychology    February 13, 2014   Volume 5 108 doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00108
Rochais C, Henry S, Sankey C, Nassur F, Góracka-Bruzda A, Hausberger M.As visual attention is an intrinsic part of social relationships, and because relationships are built on a succession of interactions, their establishment involves learning and attention. The emotional, rewarding or punishing, content can modulate selective attention. In horses, the use of positive/negative reinforcement during training determines short and long-term human-horse relationships. In a recent study in horses, where either food or withers' grooming were used as a reward, it appeared that only the food-rewarded horses learned the task and show better relationship with humans. In the...
How accurate are we at assessing others’ well-being? The example of welfare assessment in horses.
Frontiers in psychology    January 24, 2014   Volume 5 21 doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00021
Lesimple C, Hausberger M.Healthcare practitioners such as physicians or nurses often underestimate patients' well-being impairment (e.g., pain, anxiety) which may lead to undesirable consequences on treatment decisions. Lack of recognition/identification of signals and over-exposure are two reasons invoked, but a combination of factors may be involved. Studying human decoding of animals' expressions of emotions showed that "identification" to the subject was necessary to decode the other's internal state. In the present study we wanted to compare caretakers' reports on the prevalence of stereotypic or abnormal repetit...
The interrelations of good welfare indicators assessed in working horses and their relationships with the type of work.
Research in veterinary science    January 4, 2014   Volume 96, Issue 2 406-414 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2013.12.014
Popescu S, Diugan EA, Spinu M.This paper presents a different approach to the welfare of working horses through the indicators of good welfare, their interrelations and their relationships with the type of work performed by the horses. 697 working horses were assessed by using observation, behavioural tests, clinical exams and questionnaires. The correlated results highlight the complex and multiple interrelations between the good welfare indicators, showing once again that animal welfare is under the influence of all its three dimensions (physical and emotional wellbeing and naturalness). In working horses, the heavier th...
Stress modulates instrumental learning performances in horses (Equus caballus) in interaction with temperament.
PloS one    April 23, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 4 e62324 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062324
Valenchon M, Lévy F, Prunier A, Moussu C, Calandreau L, Lansade L.The present study investigates how the temperament of the animal affects the influence of acute stress on the acquisition and reacquisition processes of a learning task. After temperament was assessed, horses were subjected to a stressor before or after the acquisition session of an instrumental task. Eight days later, horses were subjected to a reacquisition session without any stressor. Stress before acquisition tended to enhance the number of successes at the beginning of the acquisition session. Eight days later, during the reacquisition session, contrary to non-stressed animals, horses st...
Conceptualising the Impact of Arousal and Affective State on Training Outcomes of Operant Conditioning.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    April 11, 2013   Volume 3, Issue 2 300-317 doi: 10.3390/ani3020300
Starling MJ, Branson N, Cody D, McGreevy PD.Animal training relies heavily on an understanding of species-specific behaviour as it integrates with operant conditioning principles. Following on from recent studies showing that affective states and arousal levels may correlate with behavioural outcomes, we explore the contribution of both affective state and arousal in behavioural responses to operant conditioning. This paper provides a framework for assessing how affective state and arousal may influence the efficacy of operant training methods. It provides a series of three-dimensional conceptual graphs as exemplars to describing putati...
Therapeutic horse back riding of a spinal cord injured veteran: a case study.
Rehabilitation nursing : the official journal of the Association of Rehabilitation Nurses    December 6, 2012   Volume 37, Issue 6 270-276 doi: 10.1002/rnj.027
Asselin G, Penning JH, Ramanujam S, Neri R, Ward C.To determine an incomplete spinal cord injured veteran's experience following participation in a therapeutic horseback riding program. Methods: Following the establishment of a nationwide therapeutic riding program for America's wounded service veterans in 2007, a Certified Rehabilitation Registered Nurse from the Michael E. DeBakey Veteran Affairs Medical Center worked with an incomplete spinal cord injured veteran who participated in the Horses for Heroes program. Results: This program resulted in many benefits for the veteran, including an increase in balance, muscle strength, and self-este...
Psychological factors affecting equine performance.
BMC veterinary research    September 27, 2012   Volume 8 180 doi: 10.1186/1746-6148-8-180
McBride SD, Mills DS.For optimal individual performance within any equestrian discipline horses must be in peak physical condition and have the correct psychological state. This review discusses the psychological factors that affect the performance of the horse and, in turn, identifies areas within the competition horse industry where current behavioral research and established behavioral modification techniques could be applied to further enhance the performance of animals. In particular, the role of affective processes underpinning temperament, mood and emotional reaction in determining discipline-specific perfo...
Towards an ethological animal model of depression? A study on horses.
PloS one    June 28, 2012   Volume 7, Issue 6 e39280 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0039280
Fureix C, Jego P, Henry S, Lansade L, Hausberger M.Recent reviews question current animal models of depression and emphasise the need for ethological models of mood disorders based on animals living under natural conditions. Domestic horses encounter chronic stress, including potential stress at work, which can induce behavioural disorders (e.g. "apathy"). Our pioneering study evaluated the potential of domestic horses in their usual environment to become an ethological model of depression by testing this models' face validity (i.e. behavioural similarity with descriptions of human depressive states). Results: We observed the spontaneous behav...
A few days of social separation affects yearling horses’ response to emotional reactivity tests and enhances learning performance.
Behavioural processes    June 15, 2012   Volume 91, Issue 1 94-102 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2012.06.003
Lansade L, Neveux C, Levy F.Learning performance is influenced by emotional reactivity, low reactivity being generally beneficial. Previous experiments show that emotional reactivity can be modified after a period of social isolation. We hypothesized that eleven days of isolation would affect yearlings' emotional reactivity and improve their learning abilities. Twenty-five yearlings were divided into two groups: 12 were continuously isolated for 11 days (isolated) and 13 stayed together (control). During the period of isolation, all yearlings underwent two learning tasks: a habituation procedure in which a novel object w...
Equine road user safety: public attitudes, understandings and beliefs from a qualitative study in the United Kingdom.
Accident; analysis and prevention    July 13, 2011   Volume 43, Issue 6 2173-2181 doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2011.06.009
Chapman C, Musselwhite CBA.Horse riders represent a significant group of vulnerable road user and are involved in a number of accidents and near misses on the road. Despite this horse riders have received little attention both in terms of academic research and transport policy. Based on literature on vulnerable road user safety, including attitudes to road user safety and behaviour of drivers and their relationship with cyclists and motorcyclists, this paper examines the attitudes and reported behaviour of drivers and horse riders. A total of 46 participants took part in six focus groups divided into four groups of driv...
The evolutionary origins of friendship.
Annual review of psychology    July 5, 2011   Volume 63 153-177 doi: 10.1146/annurev-psych-120710-100337
Seyfarth RM, Cheney DL.Convergent evidence from many species reveals the evolutionary origins of human friendship. In horses, elephants, hyenas, dolphins, monkeys, and chimpanzees, some individuals form friendships that last for years. Bonds occur among females, among males, or between males and females. Genetic relatedness affects friendships. In species where males disperse, friendships are more likely among females. If females disperse, friendships are more likely among males. Not all friendships, however, depend on kinship; many are formed between unrelated individuals. Friendships often involve cooperative inte...
Asymmetry of behavioral responses to a human approach in young naive vs. trained horses.
Physiology & behavior    May 13, 2011   Volume 104, Issue 3 464-468 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.05.009
Sankey C, Henry S, Clouard C, Richard-Yris MA, Hausberger M.The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of training experience on young horses (Equus caballus)' lateralized responses to an approaching human. The results show that the one year old untrained horses display asymmetrical responses to an approaching human, with more negative reactions (escapes, threats) when approached from the left side, while approaches towards the right shoulder elicited more positive behaviors. On the contrary, two years old trained horses reacted equally positively to approaches and contact on both sides. Our findings support those of previous studies investiga...
Equine behaviour and heart rate in temperament tests with or without rider or handler.
Physiology & behavior    May 13, 2011   Volume 104, Issue 3 454-463 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.05.010
König von Borstel U, Euent S, Graf P, König S, Gauly M.The aim of the present study was to compare horses' heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (RMSSD, pNN50) and behaviour in the same temperament test when being ridden, led, and released free. Behavioural measurements included scores and linear measurements for reactivity (R), activity (A), time to calm down (T) and emotionality (E), recorded during the approach (1) and/or during confrontation with the stimulus (2). Sixty-five horses were each confronted 3 times (1 ridden, 1 led, 1 free running in balanced order) with 3 novel and/or sudden stimuli. Mixed model analysis indicated that leading r...
[Hippotherapy in the paedopsychiatric care project].
Soins. Pediatrie, puericulture    February 19, 2011   Issue 258 37-40 
Hameury L, Delavous P, Leroy C.Hippotherapy uses relationships with horses as a mediation method. The care treatment aims to act on the psychological functioning of children affected by relational disorders, especially in order to help the development of communication and emotions. A partnership has been established between the paedopsychiatric university centre at the CHRU in Tours (37) and a horse-riding centre.
Does work affect personality? A study in horses.
PloS one    February 9, 2011   Volume 6, Issue 2 e14659 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014659
Hausberger M, Muller C, Lunel C.It has been repeatedly hypothesized that job characteristics are related to changes in personality in humans, but often personality models still omit effects of life experience. Demonstrating reciprocal relationships between personality and work remains a challenge though, as in humans, many other influential factors may interfere. This study investigates this relationship by comparing the emotional reactivity of horses that differed only by their type of work. Horses are remarkable animal models to investigate this question as they share with humans working activities and their potential diff...
Differential outcomes of unilateral interferences at birth.
Biology letters    November 17, 2010   Volume 7, Issue 2 177-180 doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0979
de Boyer des Roches A, Durier V, Richard-Yris MA, Blois-Heulin C, Ezzaouïa M, Hausberger M, Henry S.Behavioural modifications, including modifications of emotional reactivity, can occur following early experience such as handling (manual rubbing). Here, we investigated the effects of unilateral tactile stimulation at an early stage on emotional reactions later on. We handled newborn foals intensively on one side of their body. This early unilateral tactile experience had medium-term effects: the reactions of foals to a human approach, when they were 10 days old, differed according to the side stimulated at birth. Fewer right-handled foals accepted contact with humans, they delayed first cont...
Reinforcement as a mediator of the perception of humans by horses (Equus caballus).
Animal cognition    May 21, 2010   Volume 13, Issue 5 753-764 doi: 10.1007/s10071-010-0326-9
Sankey C, Richard-Yris MA, Henry S, Fureix C, Nassur F, Hausberger M.A central question in the interspecific human/animal relationship is how domestic animals perceive humans as a significant element of their environment. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the use of positive or negative reinforcement in horse training may have consequences on the animals' perception of humans, as a positive, negative or neutral element. Two groups of ponies were trained to walk backwards in response to a vocal order using either positive or negative reinforcement. Heart rate monitors and behavioural observations were used to assess the animals' perception of humans o...
Home care for horses with chronic laminitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 13, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 1 215-223 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2009.12.012
Orsini JA, Wrigley J, Riley P.Home care for horses with chronic laminitis has been discussed rarely in the veterinary literature even though, at any given time, most of us have at least 1 chronic laminitis case in our care that is being managed at home by the owner. Almost all of our knowledge on this aspect of laminitis treatment has been gleaned through experience, by individually working through the medical, ethical, financial, and emotional challenges these cases can present. Much has already been presented on the medical management of the laminitic horse and on strategies for trimming and shoeing the laminitic foot. T...
Could work be a source of behavioural disorders? A study in horses.
PloS one    October 28, 2009   Volume 4, Issue 10 e7625 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0007625
Hausberger M, Gautier E, Biquand V, Lunel C, Jégo P.Stress at work, as shown by a number of human studies, may lead to a variety of negative and durable effects, such as impaired psychological functioning (anxiety, depression...). Horses share with humans this characteristic of working on a daily basis and are submitted then to work stressors related to physical constraints and/or more "psychological" conflicts, such as potential controversial orders from the riders or the requirement to suppress emotions. On another hand, horses may perform abnormal repetitive behaviour ("stereotypies") in response to adverse life conditions. In the present st...
Visual laterality in the domestic horse (Equus caballus) interacting with humans.
Animal cognition    July 17, 2009   Volume 13, Issue 2 229-238 doi: 10.1007/s10071-009-0260-x
Farmer K, Krueger K, Byrne RW.Most horses have a side on which they are easier to handle and a direction they favour when working on a circle, and recent studies have suggested a correlation between emotion and visual laterality when horses observe inanimate objects. As such lateralisation could provide important clues regarding the horse's cognitive processes, we investigated whether horses also show laterality in association with people. We gave horses the choice of entering a chute to left or right, with and without the passive, non-interactive presence of a person unknown to them. The left eye was preferred for scannin...
A preliminary study of the effects of handling type on horses’ emotional reactivity and the human-horse relationship.
Behavioural processes    July 8, 2009   Volume 82, Issue 2 202-210 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2009.06.012
Fureix C, Pagès M, Bon R, Lassalle JM, Kuntz P, Gonzalez G.Handling is a crucial component of the human-horse relationship. Here, we report data from an experiment conducted to assess and compare the effect of two training methods. Two groups of six Welsh mares were trained during four sessions of 50 min, one handled with traditional exercises (halter leading, grooming/brushing, lifting feet, lunging and pseudo-saddling (using only girth and saddle pad) and the second group with natural horsemanship exercises (desensitization, yielding to body pressure, lunging and free-lunging). Emotional reactivity (ER) and the human-horse relationship (HHR) were as...
[Endocrine and behavioral changes as a consequence of stress in horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 2, 2009   Volume 134, Issue 9 388-390 
de Graaf-Roelfsema E.No abstract available
Horse (Equus caballus) whinnies: a source of social information.
Animal cognition    May 18, 2009   Volume 12, Issue 5 693-704 doi: 10.1007/s10071-009-0229-9
Lemasson A, Boutin A, Boivin S, Blois-Heulin C, Hausberger M.Many animal species that rely mainly on calls to communicate produce individual acoustic structures, but we wondered whether individuals of species better known as visual communicants, with small vocal repertoires, would also exhibit individual distinctiveness in calls. Moreover, theoretical advances concerning the evolution of social intelligence are usually based on primate species data, but relatively little is known about the social cognitive capacities of non-primate mammals. However, some non-primate species demonstrate auditory recognition of social categories and possess mental represe...
Online detection of an emotional response of a horse during physical activity.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    April 17, 2009   Volume 181, Issue 1 38-42 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2009.03.017
Jansen F, Van der Krogt J, Van Loon K, Avezzù V, Guarino M, Quanten S, Berckmans D.The objective of this research was to develop a non-invasive method to detect an emotional response of a horse to novelty during physical activity. Two horses performed 20 trials each, in which the horse's heart rate (HR) and physical activity were continuously measured. The relationship between the horse's physical activity and HR was described by a mathematical model allowing online decomposition of the horse's HR into a physical component and a component containing information about its emotional state. Exposure to the novel object resulted in an increase in the emotional component of HR, w...
Equine-facilitated psychotherapy with adult female survivors of abuse.
Journal of psychosocial nursing and mental health services    January 13, 2009   Volume 46, Issue 12 36-42 doi: 10.3928/02793695-20081201-08
Meinersmann KM, Bradberry J, Roberts FB.This qualitative study examined the stories of 5 women who experienced abuse and participated in equine-facilitated psychotherapy (EFP) as part of their recovery. Anecdotal accounts support the effectiveness of EFP with women who have experienced abuse, but there is a lack of supporting research. This study was designed to examine the effectiveness of EFP in the treatment of women who have experienced abuse. Selection criteria included age, experience of abuse, participation in EFP, and ability to understand English. Data analysis identified four patterns in the participants' stories: I Can Ha...
Does horse temperament influence horse-rider cooperation?
Journal of applied animal welfare science : JAAWS    June 24, 2008   Volume 11, Issue 3 267-284 doi: 10.1080/10888700802101254
Visser EK, Van Reenen CG, Blokhuis MZ, Morgan EK, Hassmén P, Rundgren TM, Blokhuis HJ.Cooperation between rider and horse is of major importance in equitation. A balanced team of horse and rider improves (sport) performances and welfare aspects by decreasing stress, frustration, risks of injuries, and accidents. Important features affecting the cooperation are the physical skills, knowledge, and personality of the rider on one hand and the temperament, experience, and physical abilities of the horse on the other. A study with 16 riders and 16 warm-blood riding horses tested the effect of personality of riders and temperament of horses on cooperation between riders and horses. M...
Laterality and emotions: visual laterality in the domestic horse (Equus caballus) differs with objects’ emotional value.
Physiology & behavior    March 12, 2008   Volume 94, Issue 3 487-490 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.03.002
De Boyer Des Roches A, Richard-Yris MA, Henry S, Ezzaouïa M, Hausberger M.Lateralization of emotions has received great attention in the last decades, both in humans and animals, but little interest has been given to side bias in perceptual processing. Here, we investigated the influence of the emotional valence of stimuli on visual and olfactory explorations by horses, a large mammalian species with two large monocular visual fields and almost complete decussation of optic fibres. We confronted 38 Arab mares to three objects with either a positive, negative or neutral emotional valence (novel object). The results revealed a gradient of exploration of the 3 objects ...