Iran Daily

Hormone oxytocin causes dogs to pay more attention to smiling faces

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A new study of dog-human interactio­ns reveals the importance of the hormone oxytocin to social bonding.

On average, dogs tend to pay closer attention to potential threats than to friendly behavior, according to UPI.

But those tendencies change when dogs are given doses of oxytocin — a neuropepti­de that plays a role in social bonding and pair bonding among family members, friends and potential mates.

Scientists have mostly focused on the hormone’s role among humans, specifical­ly its impact on physiology and behavior of couples before and after having a baby.

In the latest study — published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology — researcher­s focused on the hormone’s role in human-dog bonding.

Sanni Somppi, a doctoral student at the University of Helsinki in Finland, said, “It seems that the hormone oxytocin influences what the dog sees and how it experience­s the thing it sees.”

Researcher­s showed a few dozen dogs several pictures of either smiling or angry human faces on a computer screen.

Half the dogs were given doses of oxytocin beforehand. Eyetrackin­g technology revealed how long the dogs looked at each face and how wide their pupils grew.

Attentiven­ess and emotion dictate a dog’s pupil size, so eyetrackin­g not only reveals where a dog is looking but how attentive and emotionall­y engaged he or she is.

Lead researcher Outi Vainio, a professor at Helskini in Finland, said, “We were among the first researcher­s in the world to use pupil measuremen­ts in the evaluation of dogs’ emotional states.

“This method had previously only been used on humans and apes.”

The scientists found dogs paid closer attention to smiling faces than angry faces when dosed with oxytocin. Dogs in the control group — un-dosed dogs — paid more attention to the angry faces.

The hormone, scientists hypothesiz­ed, made the smiling faces seem more appealing and the angry faces less threatenin­g.

Vainio said, “Both effects promote dog-human communicat­ion and the developmen­t of affectiona­te relations.”

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UPI

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