Abstract
Oxytocin
(OT) has been shown to play an important role in social bonding in
animals. However, it is unclear whether OT is related to inter-species
social bonding. In this study, to examine the possibility that urinary
OT concentrations of owners were increased by their “dog's gaze”,
perhaps representing social attachment to their owners, we measured
urinary OT concentrations of owners before and after interaction with
their dogs. Dog owners interacted with their dogs as usual for 30 min
(interaction experiment) or were instructed not to look at their dogs
directly (control experiment). We observed the behaviors of owners and
their dogs during the experiments, and measured OT concentrations by
radioimmunoassay in urine samples from the owners collected just before
and 20 min after interaction with their dogs. Using a cluster analysis,
owners could be divided into two groups: one received a longer duration
of gaze from their dogs and reported a higher degree of relationship
with their dogs (LG); the other received a shorter duration of gaze and
reported a lower degree of relationship (SG). Urinary OT was higher in
LG than SG after usual interaction with their dogs, but not in the
control experiment. In the interaction experiment, a high correlation
was found in LG between the frequency of behavioral exchanges initiated
by the dog's gaze and the increase in urinary OT. We conclude that
interactions with dogs, especially those initiated by the dog's gaze,
can increase the urinary OT concentrations of their owners as a
manifestation of attachment behavior.
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