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Neslhan

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    Vanessa Woods, Author of The Genius of Dogs, answered this months question. Enjoy!

    That’s a fantastic question, and lucky for us, there is research that may be able to shed some light on it! In a study by Dr. David Tuber at Ohio State University, researchers looked at the expression of stress hormones when dogs were placed in a strange new context, in this case an unfamiliar room.

    What they found was that when dogs were alone, their stress level went up significantly. The scientists were able to detect this due to a spike in stress hormones. Furthermore, the researchers found that even when dogs were with a familiar dog in the unfamiliar room, their stress hormones still spiked up. However, when placed in the unfamiliar room with a familiar human the dog had little to no increase in stress hormones. Throughout the time in the room, the dog stayed…

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    Neslhan commented  · 

    Thank you for the guidance. I have one more question; my friend will leave her dog to me for a couple of days and I will need to leave the dog alone at home, as I have to go to work. How does the dog react, how does it feel afterwards?

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