If you've ever yelled at
a dog, you've seen it: A pooch bowed low with big eyes, perhaps surrounded
by torn-up couch cushions, ruined food or urine stains. It's the stuff "dog shaming" memes are made
of.
Such canine cowering,
though, actually evolved as a complex survival tactic among their wolf
relatives. Animal behaviorists call it an "apology bow."
Nathan H. Lents, a
molecular biologist with the City University of New York, wrote in Psychology Today that young wolves show
apology bows as they begin social integration. Wolves engage in the same
rough-and-tumble play as dogs do, he said, which becomes a laboratory for
learning the pack's social rules.
If a playful wolf bites
too hard, the animal will be spurned by the pack for bad behavior, Lent
explained. In order to return to the social unit, he said, the wolf must
approach with an apology bow. The same goes for dogs.
"Dogs have
inherited this behavior and they will use it after any kind of infraction that
results in being punished," Lents wrote. "As social animals,
they crave harmonious integration in the group and neglect or isolation is
painful for them."
A dog in deep doo doo
will stop panting, lower his head to avoid contact and put his tail between his
legs, Lents said, mimicking the actions of a lower-ranking wolf submitting to a
more dominant one.
A psychology professor
at New York City's Barnard College conducted one of the first studies
on the "guilty dog look" in 2009, and found the
look appeared most often when owners scolded their dogs — regardless of
whether the dog had disobeyed.
So it's more an act
of submission than a direct apology or expression of guilt, Lents noted, but it
basically boils down to this: "Can we be friends again?"
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