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The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The way horses are trained and managed influences their behaviour. The Equine Behaviour Assessment and Research Questionnaire (E-BARQ) was developed to gather information on the training, management, and behaviour of domestic horses. An international panel was established to assist w...

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Autores principales: Fenner, Kate, Dashper, Katherine, Serpell, James, McLean, Andrew, Wilkins, Cristina, Klinck, Mary, Wilson, Bethany, McGreevy, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7693391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114408
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10111960
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author Fenner, Kate
Dashper, Katherine
Serpell, James
McLean, Andrew
Wilkins, Cristina
Klinck, Mary
Wilson, Bethany
McGreevy, Paul
author_facet Fenner, Kate
Dashper, Katherine
Serpell, James
McLean, Andrew
Wilkins, Cristina
Klinck, Mary
Wilson, Bethany
McGreevy, Paul
author_sort Fenner, Kate
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The way horses are trained and managed influences their behaviour. The Equine Behaviour Assessment and Research Questionnaire (E-BARQ) was developed to gather information on the training, management, and behaviour of domestic horses. An international panel was established to assist with the questionnaire development and the pilot questionnaire collected data on 1320 horses. Statistical analysis revealed the E-BARQ to be a suitable representation of relevant features of horse training and management and the objective reporting of horse behaviour. ABSTRACT: The Equine Behaviour Assessment and Research Questionnaire (E-BARQ) is a questionnaire instrument developed to obtain quantitative data on the domestic equine triad of training, management, and behaviour of horses. The E-BARQ was developed to identify how changes in training and management impact behaviour over time, to define normal behaviour in horses, and to discover how to improve rider safety and horse welfare, leading to ethical equitation. During the development of the E-BARQ, we also investigated how best to motivate stakeholders to engage with this citizen science project. The pilot version of the E-BARQ collected qualitative data on respondents’ experience of the questionnaire. The pilot questionnaire was developed with the assistance of an international panel (with professional expertise in horse training, equitation science, veterinary science, equestrian coaching, welfare, animal behaviour, and elite-level riding), and was used to collect data on 1320 horses from approximately 1194 owner/caregiver respondents, with an option for respondents to provide free-text feedback. A Rotated Principal Component Analysis of the 218 behavioural, management, and training questionnaire items extracted a total of 65 rotated components. Thirty-six of the 65 rotated components demonstrated high internal reliability. Of the 218 questionnaire items, 43 items failed to reach the Rotated Principal Component Analysis criteria and were not included in the final version of the E-BARQ. Survey items that failed the Rotated Principal Component Analysis inclusion criteria were discarded if found to have a less than 85% response rate, or a variance of less than 1.3. Of those that survived the Rotated Principal Component Analysis, items were further assigned to horse temperament (17 rotated components), equitation (11 rotated components), and management and equipment (8 rotated components) groups. The feedback from respondents indicated the need for further items to be added to the questionnaire, resulting in a total of 214 items for the final E-BARQ survey. Many of these items were further grouped into question matrices, and the demographic items for horse and handler included, giving a final total of 97 questions on the E-BARQ questionnaire. These results provided content validity, showing that the questionnaire items were an acceptable representation of the entire horse training, management, and behavioural domain for the development of the final E-BARQ questionnaire.
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spelling pubmed-76933912020-11-28 The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour Fenner, Kate Dashper, Katherine Serpell, James McLean, Andrew Wilkins, Cristina Klinck, Mary Wilson, Bethany McGreevy, Paul Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The way horses are trained and managed influences their behaviour. The Equine Behaviour Assessment and Research Questionnaire (E-BARQ) was developed to gather information on the training, management, and behaviour of domestic horses. An international panel was established to assist with the questionnaire development and the pilot questionnaire collected data on 1320 horses. Statistical analysis revealed the E-BARQ to be a suitable representation of relevant features of horse training and management and the objective reporting of horse behaviour. ABSTRACT: The Equine Behaviour Assessment and Research Questionnaire (E-BARQ) is a questionnaire instrument developed to obtain quantitative data on the domestic equine triad of training, management, and behaviour of horses. The E-BARQ was developed to identify how changes in training and management impact behaviour over time, to define normal behaviour in horses, and to discover how to improve rider safety and horse welfare, leading to ethical equitation. During the development of the E-BARQ, we also investigated how best to motivate stakeholders to engage with this citizen science project. The pilot version of the E-BARQ collected qualitative data on respondents’ experience of the questionnaire. The pilot questionnaire was developed with the assistance of an international panel (with professional expertise in horse training, equitation science, veterinary science, equestrian coaching, welfare, animal behaviour, and elite-level riding), and was used to collect data on 1320 horses from approximately 1194 owner/caregiver respondents, with an option for respondents to provide free-text feedback. A Rotated Principal Component Analysis of the 218 behavioural, management, and training questionnaire items extracted a total of 65 rotated components. Thirty-six of the 65 rotated components demonstrated high internal reliability. Of the 218 questionnaire items, 43 items failed to reach the Rotated Principal Component Analysis criteria and were not included in the final version of the E-BARQ. Survey items that failed the Rotated Principal Component Analysis inclusion criteria were discarded if found to have a less than 85% response rate, or a variance of less than 1.3. Of those that survived the Rotated Principal Component Analysis, items were further assigned to horse temperament (17 rotated components), equitation (11 rotated components), and management and equipment (8 rotated components) groups. The feedback from respondents indicated the need for further items to be added to the questionnaire, resulting in a total of 214 items for the final E-BARQ survey. Many of these items were further grouped into question matrices, and the demographic items for horse and handler included, giving a final total of 97 questions on the E-BARQ questionnaire. These results provided content validity, showing that the questionnaire items were an acceptable representation of the entire horse training, management, and behavioural domain for the development of the final E-BARQ questionnaire. MDPI 2020-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7693391/ /pubmed/33114408 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10111960 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fenner, Kate
Dashper, Katherine
Serpell, James
McLean, Andrew
Wilkins, Cristina
Klinck, Mary
Wilson, Bethany
McGreevy, Paul
The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title_full The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title_fullStr The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title_full_unstemmed The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title_short The Development of a Novel Questionnaire Approach to the Investigation of Horse Training, Management, and Behaviour
title_sort development of a novel questionnaire approach to the investigation of horse training, management, and behaviour
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7693391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114408
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10111960
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