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Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Slow blinking is a type of interaction between humans and cats that involves a sequence of prolonged eye narrowing movements being given by both parties. This interspecific social behaviour has recently been studied empirically and appears to be a form of positive communication for c...

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Autores principales: Humphrey, Tasmin, Stringer, Faye, Proops, Leanne, McComb, Karen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33266179
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10122256
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author Humphrey, Tasmin
Stringer, Faye
Proops, Leanne
McComb, Karen
author_facet Humphrey, Tasmin
Stringer, Faye
Proops, Leanne
McComb, Karen
author_sort Humphrey, Tasmin
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Slow blinking is a type of interaction between humans and cats that involves a sequence of prolonged eye narrowing movements being given by both parties. This interspecific social behaviour has recently been studied empirically and appears to be a form of positive communication for cats, who are more likely to approach a previously unfamiliar human after such interactions. We investigated whether slow blinking can also affect human preferences for cats in a shelter environment. We measured whether cats’ readiness to respond to a human-initiated slow blink interaction was associated with rates of rehoming in the shelter. We also examined cats’ propensity to slow blink when they were anxious around humans or not. We demonstrated that cats that responded to human slow blinking by using eye closures themselves were rehomed quicker than cats that closed their eyes less. Cats that were initially identified as more nervous around humans also showed a trend towards giving longer total slow blink movements in response to human slow blinking. Our results suggest that the cat slow blink sequence is perceived as positive by humans and may have a dual function in cats, occurring in both affiliative and submissive situations. ABSTRACT: The process of domestication is likely to have led to the development of adaptive interspecific social abilities in animals. Such abilities are particularly interesting in less gregarious animals, such as cats. One notable social behaviour that cats exhibit in relation to humans is the slow blink sequence, which our previous research suggests can function as a form of positive communication between cats and humans. This behaviour involves the production of successive half blinks followed by either a prolonged narrowing of the eye or an eye closure. The present study investigates how cat (n = 18) slow blink sequences might affect human preferences during the adoption of shelter cats. Our study specifically tested (1) whether cats’ propensity to respond to human-initiated slow blinking was associated with their speed of rehoming from a shelter environment, and (2) whether cats’ anxiety around humans was related to their tendency to slow blink. Our experiments demonstrated that cats that showed an increased number of and longer eye closures in response to human slow blinks were rehomed faster, and that nervous cats, who had been identified as needing desensitisation to humans, tended to spend more time producing slow blink sequences in response to human slow blinks than a non-desensitisation group. Collectively, these results suggest that the cat slow blink sequence is perceived as positive by humans and may have a dual function—occurring in both affiliative and submissive contexts.
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spelling pubmed-77613812020-12-26 Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption Humphrey, Tasmin Stringer, Faye Proops, Leanne McComb, Karen Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Slow blinking is a type of interaction between humans and cats that involves a sequence of prolonged eye narrowing movements being given by both parties. This interspecific social behaviour has recently been studied empirically and appears to be a form of positive communication for cats, who are more likely to approach a previously unfamiliar human after such interactions. We investigated whether slow blinking can also affect human preferences for cats in a shelter environment. We measured whether cats’ readiness to respond to a human-initiated slow blink interaction was associated with rates of rehoming in the shelter. We also examined cats’ propensity to slow blink when they were anxious around humans or not. We demonstrated that cats that responded to human slow blinking by using eye closures themselves were rehomed quicker than cats that closed their eyes less. Cats that were initially identified as more nervous around humans also showed a trend towards giving longer total slow blink movements in response to human slow blinking. Our results suggest that the cat slow blink sequence is perceived as positive by humans and may have a dual function in cats, occurring in both affiliative and submissive situations. ABSTRACT: The process of domestication is likely to have led to the development of adaptive interspecific social abilities in animals. Such abilities are particularly interesting in less gregarious animals, such as cats. One notable social behaviour that cats exhibit in relation to humans is the slow blink sequence, which our previous research suggests can function as a form of positive communication between cats and humans. This behaviour involves the production of successive half blinks followed by either a prolonged narrowing of the eye or an eye closure. The present study investigates how cat (n = 18) slow blink sequences might affect human preferences during the adoption of shelter cats. Our study specifically tested (1) whether cats’ propensity to respond to human-initiated slow blinking was associated with their speed of rehoming from a shelter environment, and (2) whether cats’ anxiety around humans was related to their tendency to slow blink. Our experiments demonstrated that cats that showed an increased number of and longer eye closures in response to human slow blinks were rehomed faster, and that nervous cats, who had been identified as needing desensitisation to humans, tended to spend more time producing slow blink sequences in response to human slow blinks than a non-desensitisation group. Collectively, these results suggest that the cat slow blink sequence is perceived as positive by humans and may have a dual function—occurring in both affiliative and submissive contexts. MDPI 2020-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7761381/ /pubmed/33266179 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10122256 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
Humphrey, Tasmin
Stringer, Faye
Proops, Leanne
McComb, Karen
Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title_full Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title_fullStr Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title_full_unstemmed Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title_short Slow Blink Eye Closure in Shelter Cats Is Related to Quicker Adoption
title_sort slow blink eye closure in shelter cats is related to quicker adoption
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33266179
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10122256
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