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The Strange Animal Situation Test

 
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Short Description:
This research examines how children react when faced with meeting an unknown animal, in this case a guinea pig. Researchers observed four distinct types of reaction, with a majority of children (64%) reacting in a "confident manner" by going directly to the guinea pig and touching him/her. About half of the children smiled upon seeing the guinea pig.

Abstract:

Article Abstract:

"Many tools assess the reactions of humans encountering familiar or unfamiliar partners or environments. Companion animals belong to our everyday environment and influence our lives. Whereas many standardized tools test companion animals' reactions to humans, few evaluate humans' reactions to companion animals. We present here a test with a guinea pig that can be applied to a wide range of people in the home environment. This standardized test and simple coding system enabled us to characterize individual behavioral profiles of children and compare them in relation to different factors (e.g., gender, age, pet ownership). We observed 59 children (32 girls, 27 boys), aged between 6 and 12 years old. Our results show that most children first looked at the guinea pig (72%), smiled when they saw it (49%), and then went directly towards it without looking at their parent (79%). Many children touched the animal without hesitation (86%). Moreover, this test reveals more than the mere interest of children in guinea pigs. Indeed, a cluster analysis differentiated four behavioral profiles that reflected aspects of the children's experience, gender, and lifestyles. When encountering the unfamiliar guinea pig, children could be "confident" (go straight to the animal and touch it; 64%), "anxious" (look at parent; 12%), "indirect" (hesitate and touch; 14%), or "careful" (emit vocal and/or verbal behaviors; 10%). The potential future application of this research is to compare behavioral profiles quantitatively over the long term, taking into account the development and experiences of people with typical development and those with atypical development (e.g., autistic disorders)."


Spot Check Number: 1857
Sponsor: Anthrozoos
Researcher/Author: Marine Grandgeorge, Michel Deleau, Eric Lemonnier & Martine Hausberger
Animal Type: Companion Animals, Human
Record Type: Academic Paper, Journal Article, Research Study
Research Method: Experimental/Modeling/Applications
Geographic Region: Unknown/Not Applicable
Number of Participants: 59
Population Descriptors: Children, guinea pigs
Year Conducted: 2011
Note that this research study is based at least in part on experiments on animals. HRC does not condone or endorse any animal research; we post this item (and others like it) with the hope that these findings can assist advocates in their work to help animals. For a description of how we select items for the HumaneSpot.org database, please click here.
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