Scottish Daily Mail

Why women have closer bond with cats than men

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

NOT every ‘cat lady’ has wild hair and a cardigan matted with fur – but it appears that many women really do have a special relationsh­ip with their pets.

A study has found women are more likely than men to smile at and talk to their cats, believing that the animals respond to their emotions.

And when it comes to emotional ‘matching’, where owners believe cats recognise if they are happy or smiling, this is reported most often by women with older pets. The special relationsh­ip between women and cats follows a study by Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary. It suggests that females consider their cats to be more caring because they are more empathic themselves.

Led by Dr Péter Pongrácz, in the university’s Department of Ethology, the authors say: ‘Women were found in general to have more intense connection­s with their pets, their interactio­ns involve more repeating, complex behavioura­l patterns and women are also more empathic with their pets.’

Researcher­s gave 1 7 cat owners detailed questionna­ires which revealed that women were more likely than men to initiate interactio­ns with cats.

This included talking to their cat and explaining that certain foods or items were forbidden or that the cat would not like them. It also meant smiling at and greeting their pet or other cats.

Women were more likely than men to see their cat as empathic, believing the animal wanted their attention and responded to their emotions.

The study, reported in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science, was set up to see if cats are viewed as the ‘perfect companion’ in the same way as dogs, because of popular assumption­s that cats are selfish.

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