Attachment Behavior in Dogs (Canis familiaris ): A New Application of Ainsworth's (1969) Strange Situation Test
Fifty-one owner-dog pairs were observed in a modified version of M. D. S. Ainsworth's (1969) Strange Situation Test. The results demonstrate that adult dogs ( Canis familiaris ) show patterns of attachment behavior toward the owner. Although there was considerable variability in dogs' atta...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of comparative psychology (1983) 1998-09, Vol.112 (3), p.219-229 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fifty-one owner-dog pairs were observed in a modified
version of
M. D. S. Ainsworth's
(1969)
Strange Situation Test. The results demonstrate
that adult dogs (
Canis familiaris
) show
patterns of attachment behavior toward the owner. Although there was
considerable variability in dogs' attachment behavior to humans, the
authors did not find any effect of gender, age, living conditions, or breed on most of the behavioral variables. The human-dog
relationship was described by means of a factor analysis in a
3-dimensional factor space:
Anxiety, Acceptance,
and
Attachment.
A cluster
analysis revealed 5 substantially different classes of dogs, and
dogs could be categorized along the secure-insecure attached
dimensions of Ainsworth's original test. A dog's relationship to
humans is analogous to child-parent and chimpanzee-human
attachment behavior because the observed behavioral phenomena and
the classification are similar to those described in
mother-infant interactions. |
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ISSN: | 0735-7036 1939-2087 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0735-7036.112.3.219 |