Abstract
This
study investigates ontogenetic aspects of attachment behaviour in guide
dogs using the Strange Situation Test (SST). Seventeen dogs were tested
three times in different periods of the guide dog training program. The
first test was carried out when the dogs were 11–15 months old and
before entering the training program; the second test took place after 4
months of training; the last test was carried out after more than 1
year of service as guide dogs. Therefore three different human figures
were involved in the program: the puppy walker, the trainer and the
blind owner. In each test the dogs’ behaviour was video recorded and
subsequently scored using a 5-s point sampling method; furthermore heart
rate (HR) was recorded both before (HR basal average) and during the
SST.
Results of the present study show that when tested for
the first time at the age of 11 months, dogs exhibited an intense play
activity and a limited discrimination of the attachment figure: during
separation from the puppy walker their attention was directed towards
the stranger that could offer comfort rather than to the owner's exit
from the room. On the contrary, the same dogs tested when adult, after 1
year of life with the blind owner were specifically interested in
regaining contact with their owner despite the presence of another
friendly human (the stranger) available for support. The three
repetitions of the SST had only a limited impact on dogs behaviour:
previous experiences with the room and the procedure of the test did
determine a decrease of exploratory behaviour and of puppet fear, but
not of the emotional response to separation from the owner. As the heart
rate curve was available only for a limited number of dogs cautious
conclusions are drawn on cardiac activity: when adult, dogs showed a
higher cardiac activation despite a decrement in HR baseline. Overall,
the outcome of the present study indicate that a full-fledged attachment
is showed when guide dogs reach maturity and that repeated bond
breaking is not detrimental to forming attachment later in life.
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