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Evaluating aggressive behavior in dogs: a comparison of 3 tests
Institution:1. Animal Behaviour and Welfare Group, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Lincoln, United Kingdom;2. Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, Animal Neurology, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland;3. Division of Animal Housing and Welfare, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland;1. Department of Veterinary Science and Public Health, University of Milan, Milan, Italy;2. CAN (Comportamento Animale Napoli), Naples, Italy;1. Department of Veterinary Medicine (IVRU-NARILIS), University of Namur, Namur, Belgium;2. VetEthology, Leemveldstraat, Overijse, Belgium;3. Department of Ethology and Animal Welfare, Catholic University College Ghent, Sint-Niklaas, Belgium;4. DAVALON, Herendaal, Maastricht, The Netherlands;1. Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, The University of Melbourne, 250 Princes Hwy, Werribee, VIC 3030, Australia;2. Animal Welfare Science Centre, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia;3. Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia;4. Advanced Vetcare, Kensington, VIC 3031, Australia
Abstract:This study assessed the consistency with which aggressive behavior occurred across 3 different provocation tests that are currently used in practice to evaluate the behavior and safety of dogs. The aim of this study was not to validate the tests, but to evaluate tests that are not validated but are nevertheless being used in a legal context in Switzerland, by investigating the hypothesis that 3 different approaches, all claiming to correctly evaluate the behavior of dogs, should be expected to show significant agreement. The same 60 dogs were tested in 3 behavioral tests being used in Switzerland at the time of this study in the year 2003 (Test A: Test of the American Staffordshire Terrier Club; Test B: Halterprüfung; Test C: Test of the Canton of Basel-Stadt). “Intraspecific behavior” and “interspecific behavior toward humans” that might relate to potential aggressive behavior were of particular interest.The observed agreement among the 3 tests was compared relative to chance using a κ test. Significant but low levels of agreement were found among the 3 tests for the criterion “intraspecific behavior” (κ = 0.133, P = .014), with the highest correlation between Tests A and B (κ = 0.345, P < .001) and for the criterion “interspecific behavior” (κ = 0.135, P = 0. 014), with Tests A and B (κ = 0.220, P = .005) showing the highest correlation. However, significant absolute values of κ were low in all cases. In a further analysis, dogs evaluated to show no signs of potential aggression in the test situations by all 3 tests were eliminated, and the results of the remaining dogs (“interspecific behavior,” n = 23; “intraspecific behavior,” n = 29) were assessed for disagreement in pairwise combinations using a McNemar chi-square test. No significant levels of disagreement were found for “intraspecific behavior,” however, for “interspecific behavior,” Tests A and B (P = .035), and Tests B and C (P < .001) differed significantly, with no significant difference between Tests A and B (P = 0.11). The inconsistency of the results from different tests suggests test bias at the very least and questions the validity of these tests. Further work examining the validity of each individual test is warranted if they are to be used in a legal context.
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