Dogs really do love us: Study finds first evidence of inter-species hormone exchange
17
April, 2015
Dog
lovers everywhere, rejoice! They really do love us on a chemical
level. Dogs were found to make use of the “lovers’ hormone,”
Oxytocin, to sneak their way into our hearts. That’s the first time
the mechanism was observed between species.
We
know it as the love hormone: it spikes when we hug, kiss and make
love. It also exists between a mother and infant, as they gaze into
each others’ eyes. But oxytocin is more than that. The hormone is
one of the most important evolutionary bonding mechanisms known to
man. Without it, affection, trust and altruism, as we know them,
would never have been possible.
So
imagine the surprise at Azabu University’s School of Veterinary
Medicine in Sagamihara, Japan when Miho Nagasawa, Takefumi Kikusui
and their colleagues found that the bond works both ways between our
species: dogs just love to peer into our eyes, as we do into theirs.
The
mechanism is known to be a loop in humans. For instance, a mother’s
gaze into a child’s eyes prompts the look of happiness in return.
Both release oxytocin and reinforce it, feeding off of the feeling.
Dogs
are already renowned for their ability for companionship and
understanding us in a way that no other animal can. But if the
implications of the new findings are correct, they are huge, and will
go toward explaining the age-old question of how dogs became
our “best
friends” thousands
of years ago.
“I
love my dogs, and I always feel that they’re more of a partner than
a pet,” Kikusui
, who’s owned a dog for 15 years, was quoted as
saying in a news piece by Science magazine, which published the study
this week. “So
I started wondering, ‘Why are they so close to humans? Why are they
connected so tightly to us?’”
"[Our]
findings support the existence of an interspecies oxytocin-mediated
positive loop facilitated and modulated by gazing," Nagasawa
said in the study.
She has three human-canine relationship studies that support her
theory.
Kikusui
and Nagasawa invited 30 of their friends with pets to test the
theory. First the team had each dog and owner interact separately
with each other in a room for 30 minutes, recording them. The
researchers then scanned for oxytocin levels in the urine in both
species to see if they had changed. They immediately found that the
more a dog gazes into a human’s eyes, the more pleasure and
child-like feelings of adoration it experiences.
That
spike was mirrored in the owners. A previous
study from
2009 corroborates this (scientists then found a strong basis for the
new research when the effect of looking into a dog’s eyes was
demonstrated in humans).
Reuters / Alessia Pierdomenico
To
find out whether the feeling was mutual, the team sprayed either
oxytocin or a simple saline into the
noses of 27 of our furry friends and placed each dog in a room with
its owner and two complete strangers. They found that the dogs
sprayed with oxytocin spent significantly more time gazing into their
owners’ eyes than the other ones, and that the effect was
mysteriously absent in male dogs. Researchers speculate this
could be because of increased sensitivity to the hormone.
Further
to this, the effect in the owners of the dogs was also increased,
even though the owners did not receive the hormone artificially. It
follows that even an artificial oxytocin increase in the dogs
signaled the release of the hormones in their owners.
“It’s
an incredible finding that suggests that dogs have hijacked the human
bonding system,” Brian
Hare, an expert on canine cognition at Duke University, North
Carolina, who was not involved in the research, was quoted as saying
in a Science article. “A
finding of this magnitude will need to be replicated because it
potentially has such far-reaching implications,” he
said. It is also Hare’s view that oxytocin could be at the very
core of why dogs are so useful in treating autism and people with
post-traumatic stress disorder.
The
team’s study has been supported by an editorial from Duke, whose
authors believe the discovery“is
a powerful mechanism, through which dogs win our hearts – and we
win theirs in return.”
No
other inter-species oxytocin link has ever been observed, so the
dog-human bond, for now, is a truly unique thing. It should also put
a lot of sceptics at ease: dogs really do love us as deeply as we
love them.
And this parrot has something to say!
And this parrot has something to say!
Why you gotta be so rude ?...... #parrot #mouthingoff #badday #wtf
Posted by Asher Monroe on Friday, 5 September 2014
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