Treats or Affection? Understanding Reward Preferences in Indian Free-ranging Dogs for Bonding with Humans
Srijaya Nandi, Aesha Lahiri, Tuhin Subhra Pal, Anamitra Roy, Rittika, Bairagya, Anindita Bhadra

TL;DR
This study investigates how food and petting influence bonding with unfamiliar humans in Indian free-ranging dogs, revealing that food initially attracts dogs more, but over time both rewards equally foster positive social bonds.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into the relative impact of food versus petting on social association formation in free-ranging dogs over repeated interactions.
Findings
Food is a stronger short-term motivator for dogs.
Repeated interactions with either reward foster similar bonds.
Preference for individuals providing rewards diminishes over time.
Abstract
Free-ranging dogs constitute approximately 80% of the global dog population. These dogs are freely breeding and live without direct human supervision, making them an ideal model system for studying dog-human relationships. Living in close proximity with humans, free-ranging dogs in India frequently interact with people, and previous studies suggest that humans are a crucial part of their social environment. Positive reinforcement in the form of food and petting is commonly received from humans. In this study, we investigated which type of reward, food or petting, is more influential in shaping positive social associations with unfamiliar humans. Field trials were conducted on 61 adult free-ranging dogs in Nadia district, West Bengal, India. During a familiarization phase, two unfamiliar individuals each provided either food or petting to the dogs. This was followed by a choice test in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Emotions and Moral Behavior
