Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
We left her for a few hours one evening, and I when I came home, right in front of the door, was a chewed up ornament from the tree. She has NEVER bothered with the tree before! I came in the house and saw the carnage on the floor and said calmly, "Hershey, what did you do?" And I got a little scared cause she wasn't at the door to greet me....
She was hiding under the dining room table and refused to come out. I didn't yell, I didn't act angry (mostly, cause she didn't really destroy the heirloom and it could be glued). But she wouldn't come out from under the table for awhile! As I was picking up pieces of the ornament, she finally came out and looked me, and slinked over to the corner of the room and PEED ON THE CARPET!
Hershey has never acted like this before - despite chewing up a number of items around our house that she finds when we leave her. It's like every 8th time we leave her behind when we go some place that she'll find something to chew, so its not a huge problem, but still we try to keep things on higher shelves :o)
Do any of your doodle act ashamed or upset after you catch them when they've done something they know they shouldn't do??
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That's what I was told. But the way that I think about it is that at the time the dog steals and chews up something he shouldn't have (or has the accident, or whatever the "bad" deed may be), he is not conscious of the fact that he is doing something wrong; it's an impulsive act. It might be triggered by the stress he feels in being left alone, but it isn't done deliberately in "revenge" for your having left, lol. (It's important to emphasize this, because so many people believe that the dog deliberately does something to retaliate for being left, and then point to the fact that the dog acts guilty when you return. "See, he knows he did wrong!")
Okay so back to my scenario: sometime after having committed the misdeed, the dog realizes that there is a pile of something that shouldn't be there. (And dogs are usually very aware of something that shouldn't be where it is in their environents, whether they had something to do with it's being there or not.)He connects the presence of this "pile" with the fact that every time there has has been a similar pile in the house when you got home, you have been upset. So he becomes anxious. When you come in, his behavior reflects this anxiety.
I am not at all sure that this is the way it works; but it's one theory, and it does make sense to me.
Okay, here's an experiment you can do that will test out this theory. I contend that if there were no evidence of the misdeed, the dog would not act shameful and would greet you normally; that it is the presence of the evidence that is causing the dog to act like he knows he did something wrong, and not the actual act of doing something wrong. I believe this because I have had the experience that when a dog has stolen and entirely consumed something he should not have, from a place he should not have been, (like the garbage can or the kitchen table) he shows no guilt. How would I know that he even did something wrong? Let's just say that the "evidence" usually shows itself if you always pick up after your dog, lol. (And sometimes, it comes back up the way it went down.)
So here's the experiment: deliberately leave something like cheese or a piece of hotdog on the dining room table and leave the house. See if Rosco stills reponds the same way upon your return, when there is nothing for you to see when you walk in.
Obviously, this will only work with a dog who has been trained not to touch things on the counters, tables, garbage, etc.
okay--new link. I will delete the comments and link above and edit them into this reply
Try this link and let me know if it works.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/11/18/intelligent.dog.psychology/
Adina and Karen you may be interested in this article and video--Inside The Science of How Dogs Think Cognitive and Complex thinking in Dogs.
There are other articles that can be linked to this professor at Duke University. This particular article mentions the way dogs think and how a dog views the consequences of their actions.
You can also get a .pdf file of Dr. Hare's Research Publications on Canine Behaviors at this address:
http://evolutionaryanthropology.duke.edu/dogs/publicationsRooney isn't old enough to be left out when we leave so we have never gone through this but I would love it if he would "tip me off" by looking guilty. As a puppy he has no remorse what so ever. As I was getting ready to go out to dinner Frid. evening he jumped up and grabbed my sweater that I was wearing putting a big tooth hole right in a brand new Eileen Fisher. I was NOT happy and told him "no" but he just looked his usual happy self!
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