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Dive into the research topics where Emanuela Prato Previde is active.

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Featured researches published by Emanuela Prato Previde.


Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science | 2004

The bond that never developed: adoption and relinquishment of dogs in a rescue shelter.

Francesca Mondelli; Emanuela Prato Previde; Marina Verga; Diana Levi; Sonia Magistrelli; Paola Valsecchi

This study carried out a survey in an Italian shelter to analyze adoptions resulting in the rejection of the newly adopted dog. The results of this study show that the number of dogs adopted and returned was stable during the study, that more females than males were adopted, and that males were more likely to be returned. Almost all the dogs were returned because of behavioral problems, and most were more than 6 months of age. Some dogs were returned more than once, with 20% of the people who adopted the same dog at different times reporting the same behavioral problem. Having a house with a yard, a garden, or a terrace appeared to be important for better management of the dog and influenced the length of adoption. Half of the adopters had previous experience as caregiver for a dog; compared to adopters who had no previous experience, however, they returned their companion animal after a shorter period and because of behavioral reasons. Understanding why adopters return their dogs to shelters is an important step toward attempting to minimize relinquishments and, thus, optimize adoptions.


Physiology & Behavior | 2007

Behavioral and physiological responses of guide dogs to a situation of emotional distress.

Gaia Fallani; Emanuela Prato Previde; Paola Valsecchi

The aim of this study was to analyze the behavioral and physiological reactions of guide dogs in a distressing situation which promotes attachment behaviors towards their blind owners, and to compare such reactions with those of untrained or trainee dogs. The subjects were 57 adult Labrador and Golden retriever dogs (14 males, 43 females) belonging to four different groups: 19 Custody dogs, 13 Apprentice dogs, 10 Guide dogs and 15 Pet dogs. Dogs were tested using the Strange Situation Test, consisting in seven 3-minute episodes in which the dogs were placed in an unfamiliar environment, introduced to an unfamiliar woman and subjected to separation from their human companion. Tests were video-recorded and behaviors were scored using a 5-second point sampling method. Polar Vantage telemetric system was used to record cardiac activity. ANOVAs for repeated measures with groups and breeds as independent variables, showed a more anxious reaction in pet dogs, which revealed a high degree of proximity seeking behavior. Cardiac activity increased during episodes characterized by the exclusive presence of the stranger, but this increase was more conspicuous in guide dogs than in custody and apprentice dogs. Golden retrievers showed more behaviors suggesting distress compared to Labrador retrievers. This study showed that guide dogs, when separated from their blind owner, reveal a controlled behavioral reaction that is however accompanied by a stronger cardiac activation.


Cortex | 1998

Methodology of motor skill and laterality: new test of hand preference in Macaca nemestrina.

Marco M. Rigamonti; Emanuela Prato Previde; Marco Poli; Linda F. Marchant; William C. McGrew

Ten female pig-tailed macaques (Macaca nemestrina) were tested for hand preference and hand skill (i.e., speed of performance and error rate). The experimental task was naturalistic, calling for adaptive manual skills and fine manipulation: the monkeys had to remove small food rewards embedded in a vertical array, and precision opposition of thumb and forefinger was needed to extract each pellet. Each monkey was tested 10 times on 10 different days. The results indicated individual hand preference rather than population-level handedness; however, a tendency toward right predominance was found. The results on hand skill showed a relation between error rate and hand preference, as the preferred hand made fewer errors. A different and unexpected finding was obtained when skill was evaluated in terms of speed of performance: in adult subjects the left hand was quicker than the right. Therefore, different kinds of skill showed different patterns in relation to hand preference.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1996

Social learning in the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus).

Emanuela Prato Previde; Marco Poli

This study investigates whether golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) pups can acquire a new behavior by interacting with an experienced adult conspecific. The behavior consisted of using teeth and forepaws to retrieve a piece of food dangling from a small chain. Instrumental learning techniques were used to train the demonstrators. Four groups of pups were exposed to different kinds of social experience. In the first group, the pups interacted with their skilled mother; in the second group, they did the same with their inexperienced mother; in the third group, they interacted with inexperienced littermates; and in the fourth group, the pups were tested individually. At the end of an acquisition period, the pups were tested individually to assess their performance. The results demonstrate that interacting with a skilled mother has a remarkable effect on the acquisition of a new feeding behavior by hamster pups.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 2005

Testing for Localized Stimulus Enhancement and Object Movement Reenactment in Pig-Tailed Macaques (Macaca nemestrina) and Young Children (Homo sapiens)

Marco M. Rigamonti; Deborah M. Custance; Emanuela Prato Previde; Caterina Spiezio

Four puzzle boxes were used to investigate localized stimulus enhancement and object movement reenactment (OMR) in 13 pig-tailed macaques (Macaca nemestrina) and 30 human infants (Homo sapiens). Participants received contrasting demonstrations on each box. A circular lid was gripped by its rim or handle and swiveled to the left or right. A flap door was pushed or flipped. A sliding lid was pushed to the left or right. A pin bolt was demonstrated being pushed down, or the participants were left to solve the puzzle for themselves. Despite the fact that the monkeys watched the demonstrations about 60% of the time, only a weak OMR effect was found on the sliding lid. In contrast, the children watched significantly more, and there was clear evidence of socially mediated learning on all of the boxes.


Communicative & Integrative Biology | 2012

Red-green color vision in three catarrhine primates.

Francesca Fornalé; Stefano Vaglio; Caterina Spiezio; Emanuela Prato Previde

The evolution of the red-green visual subsystem in trichromatic primates has been linked to foraging advantages, specifically the detection of either ripe fruits or young leaves amid mature foliage, and to the intraspecific socio-sexual communication, namely the signal of the male rank, the mate choice and the reproductive strategies in females. New data should be added to the debate regarding the evolution of trichromatic color vision. Three catarrhine primates were observed to achieve this goal. The research was performed on captive groups of vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops), pig-tailed macaques (Macaca nemestrina) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) housed at Parco Natura Viva - Garda Zoological Park (Italy). Using pairs of red-green bags containing the same hidden reward in comparable outdoor enclosures, we recorded the choices by observed individuals (n = 25) to investigate the role of color cues in choosing an object. The results indicate that chimpanzees used red color as cue to choose an object that contains food by showing a preference toward red objects; in contrast, vervet monkeys and pig-tailed macaques do not demonstrate a clear choice based on the color of the object. Our findings highlight the importance of the foraging hypothesis but not rule out the potential role of the intraspecific socio-sexual communication and may serve to add useful information to the debate regarding the adaptive value of the evolution of color vision in order to fill a phylogenetic gap from Old World monkeys to humans. Future studies should address the role of socio-sexual communication, such as the selection of the reproductive partner of both high genetic quality and with compatible genes, to determine how this influenced the evolution of color vision in non-human primates.


The Social Dog#R##N#Behavior and Cognition | 2014

The Immaterial Cord: The Dog–Human Attachment Bond

Emanuela Prato Previde; Paola Valsecchi

The study of the human–dog relationship is relatively recent, and the prevalent framework, borrowed from the human infant literature, is embedded in attachment theory. This chapter starts with a brief introduction on different social bonds in animals, particularly mammals, followed by a presentation of Bowlby’s ethological attachment theory and the prevalent paradigm used in assessing attachment: the Strange Situation. Then, the nature and the characteristics of the dog–human bond are considered, and a critical review of the literature on dog–human attachment is carried out. The effects of different life experiences on attachment are presented and discussed. The dog–human relationship is discussed in the light of intraspecific mother–pup attachment behaviour. Finally, future directions in research are proposed.Abstract The study of the human–dog relationship is relatively recent, and the prevalent framework, borrowed from the human infant literature, is embedded in attachment theory. This chapter starts with a brief introduction on different social bonds in animals, particularly mammals, followed by a presentation of Bowlby’s ethological attachment theory and the prevalent paradigm used in assessing attachment: the Strange Situation. Then, the nature and the characteristics of the dog–human bond are considered, and a critical review of the literature on dog–human attachment is carried out. The effects of different life experiences on attachment are presented and discussed. The dog–human relationship is discussed in the light of intraspecific mother–pup attachment behaviour. Finally, future directions in research are proposed.


Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2005

Heart rate and behavioural responses of dogs in the Ainsworth's Strange Situation: A pilot study

Clara Palestrini; Emanuela Prato Previde; Caterina Spiezio; Marina Verga


Behavioural Processes | 2008

Does training make you smarter? The effects of training on dogs’ performance (Canis familiaris) in a problem solving task

Sarah Marshall-Pescini; Paola Valsecchi; Irena Petak; Pier Attilio Accorsi; Emanuela Prato Previde


Animal Behaviour | 2011

Human-directed gazing behaviour in puppies and adult dogs, Canis lupus familiaris

Chiara Passalacqua; Sarah Marshall-Pescini; Shanis Barnard; Gabriella Lakatos; Paola Valsecchi; Emanuela Prato Previde

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Caterina Spiezio

International School for Advanced Studies

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