Abstract
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Cognition and emotion View project Stakeholders empathy and attitude towards animal pain View project Miiamaaria V Kujala University of Jyväskylä 29 PUBLICATIONS 1,138 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Miiamaaria V Kujala on 25 July 2017. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Abstract: It is not possible to demonstrate that dogs (Canis familiaris) feel emotions, but the same is true for all other species, including our own. The issue must therefore be approached indirectly, using premises similar to those used with humans. Recent methodological advances in canine research reveal what dogs experience and what they derive from the emotions perceptible in others. Dogs attend to social cues, they respond appropriately to the valence of human and dog facial expressions and vocalizations of emotion, and their limbic reward regions respond to the odor of their caretakers. They behave differently according to the emotional situation, show emotionally driven expectations, have affective disorders, and exhibit some subcomponents of empathy. The canine brain includes a relatively large prefrontal cortex, and like primates, dogs have a brain area specialized for face perception. Dogs have many degrees of emotion, but the full extent of dog emotions remains unknown. Humans are a socially minded species; we readily impute mind and emotion to others, even to vegetables or rocks. Hence the experimental results need to be analyzed carefully, so the emotional lives of dogs are accurately estimated.
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CITATION STYLE
Kujala, M. V. (2017). Canine emotions as seen through human social cognition. Animal Sentience, 2(14). https://doi.org/10.51291/2377-7478.1114
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