PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Effects of contact with a dog on prefrontal brain activity: A controlled trial.

  • Rahel Marti,
  • Milena Petignat,
  • Valentine L Marcar,
  • Jan Hattendorf,
  • Martin Wolf,
  • Margret Hund-Georgiadis,
  • Karin Hediger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274833
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 10
p. e0274833

Abstract

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BackgroundThere is a broad range of known effects of animal contact on human mental and physical health. Neurological correlates of human interaction with animals have been sparsely investigated. We investigated changes in frontal brain activity in the presence of and during contact with a dog.MethodsTwenty-one healthy individuals each participated in six sessions. In three sessions, participants had contact with a dog, and in three control sessions they interacted with a plush animal. Each session had five two-minute phases with increasing intensity of contact to the dog or plush animal from the first to the fourth phase. We measured oxygenated, deoxygenated, and total hemoglobin and oxygen saturation of the blood in the frontal lobe/frontopolar area with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (SenSmart Model X-100) to assess brain activity.FindingsIn both conditions, the concentration of oxygenated hemoglobin increased significantly from the first to the fourth phase by 2.78 μmol/l (CI = 2.03-3.53, p ConclusionPrefrontal brain activation in healthy subjects increased with the rise in interaction closeness with a dog or a plush animal. Moreover, interaction with a dog stimulated more brain activity compared to the control condition, suggesting that interactions with a dog can activate stronger attentional processes and elicit more emotional arousal than interacting with a nonliving stimulus.