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If You Want to Know if Spot Loves You So, It’s in His Tail
Every dog lover knows how a pooch expresses its feelings.
Ears close to the head, tense posture, and tail straight out from
the body means “don’t mess with me.” Ears perked up, wriggly body
and vigorously wagging tail means “I am sooo happy to see you!”
But there is another, newly discovered, feature of dog body language
that may surprise attentive pet owners and experts in canine
behaviour. When dogs feel fundamentally positive about something or
someone, their tails wag more to the right side of their rumps. When
they have negative feelings, their tail wagging is biased to the
left.
A study describing the phenomenon, “Asymmetric tail-wagging
responses by dogs to different emotive stimuli,” appeared in the
March 20 issue of Current Biology. The authors are Giorgio
Vallortigara, a neuroscientist at the University of Trieste in
Italy, and two veterinarians, Angelo Quaranta and Marcello
Siniscalchi, at the University of Bari, also in Italy.
“This is an intriguing observation,” said Richard J. Davidson,
director of the Laboratory for Affective Neuroscience at the
University of Wisconsin in Madison. It fits with a large body of
research showing emotional asymmetry in the brain, he said.
Research has shown that in most animals, including birds, fish and
frogs, the left brain specializes in behaviors involving what the
scientists call approach and energy enrichment. In humans, that
means the left brain is associated with positive feelings, like
love, a sense of attachment, a feeling of safety and calm. It is
also associated with physiological markers, like a slow heart rate.
At a fundamental level, the right brain specializes in behaviours
involving withdrawal and energy expenditure. In humans, these
behaviours, like fleeing, are associated with feelings like fear and
depression. Physiological signals include a rapid heart rate and the
shutdown of the digestive system.
Because the left brain controls the right side of the body and the
right brain controls the left side of the body, such asymmetries are
usually manifest in opposite sides of the body. Thus many birds seek
food with their right eye (left brain/nourishment) and watch for
predators with their left eye (right brain/danger).
In humans, the muscles on the right side of the face tend to reflect
happiness (left brain) whereas muscles on the left side of the face
reflect unhappiness (right brain).
Dog tails are interesting, Dr. Davidson said, because they are in
the midline of the dog’s body, neither left nor right. So do they
show emotional asymmetry, or not?
To find out, Dr. Vallortigara and his colleagues recruited 30 family
pets of mixed breed that were enrolled in an agility training
program. The dogs were placed in a cage equipped with cameras that
precisely tracked the angles of their tail wags. Then they were
shown four stimuli through a slat in the front of the cage: their
owner; an unfamiliar human; a cat; and an unfamiliar, dominant dog.
In each instance the test dog saw a person or animal for one minute,
rested for 90 seconds and saw another view. Testing lasted 25 days
with 10 sessions per day.
When the dogs saw their owners, their tails all wagged vigorously
with a bias to the right side of their bodies, Dr. Vallortigara
said. Their tails wagged moderately, again more to the right, when
faced with an unfamiliar human. Looking at the cat, a four-year-old
male whose owners volunteered him for the experiment, the dogs’
tails again wagged more to the right but in a lower amplitude.
When the dogs looked at an aggressive, unfamiliar dog — a large
Belgian shepherd Malinois — their tails all wagged with a bias to
the left side of their bodies.
Thus when dogs were attracted to something, including a benign,
approachable cat, their tails wagged right, and when they were
fearful, their tails went left, Dr. Vallortigara said. It suggests
that the muscles in the right side of the tail reflect positive
emotions while the muscles in the left side express negative ones.
While some researchers have argued that only humans show brain
asymmetry — based on the evolution of language in the left brain —
strong left and right biases are showing up in the brains of many
so-called simpler creatures, said Lesley Rogers, a neuroscientist
who studies brain asymmetry at the University of New England in
Armidale, Australia.
Honeybees learn better when using their right antenna, she said.
Male chameleons show more aggression, reflected as changes in body
colour, when they look at another chameleon with their left eye. A
toad is more likely to jump away when a predator is introduced to
its left visual field (right brain/fear). The same toad prefers to
flick its tongue to the right side when lashing out at a cricket
(left brain/ nourishment).
Chicks prefer to use their left eye to search for food and right eye
to watch for predators overhead, Dr. Rogers said. But when chicks
are raised in the dark, they do not develop normal brain asymmetry.
In trying to eat and watch for hawks overhead, such nonlateralized
chicks become confused and vulnerable to attack.
Sheep, which are good at recognizing individual faces, use the right
sides of their brains for knowing a Dolly from a Molly.
Chimpanzee brains are asymmetrical in the same ways as human brains,
said William D. Hopkins, a researcher at the Yerkes National Primate
Center and psychologist at Agnes Scott College in Atlanta. When
chimps are excited, they tend to scratch themselves on the left side
of their bodies, reflecting strong negative emotions, he said. And
left-handed chimps are more fearful of novel stimuli than
right-handers. Their dominant right brains may make them more
cautious.
Brain asymmetry for approach and withdrawal seems to be an ancient
trait, Dr. Rogers said. Thus it must confer some sort of survival
advantage on organisms.
Animals that can do two important things at the same time, like eat
and watch for predators, would be better off, she said. And animals
with two brain hemispheres could avoid duplication of function,
making maximal use of neural tissue.
The asymmetry may also arise from how major nerves in the body
connect up to the brain, said Arthur D. Craig, a neuroanatomist at
the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix. Nerves that carry
information from the skin, heart, liver, lungs and other internal
organs are inherently asymmetrical, he said. Thus information from
the body that prompts an animal to slow down, eat, relax and restore
itself is biased toward the left brain. Information from the body
that tells an animal to run, fight, breathe faster and look out for
danger is biased toward the right brain.
In this way, Dr. Craig said, animals are naturally designed to cope
with changing environments.
By SANDRA BLAKESLEE
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