Dogs trigger attention during Animal Assisted Intervention in prison: a preliminary study

M. Grandgeorge, M. Hausberger, C. Heyraud, A. Hirschelmann
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Abstract

Animal-assisted interventions (AAI) seem to offer promising possibilities to prevent daily conditions of inmates (overcrowding or social isolation); however, nothing is known either about the potential processes involved or impact AAI on the development of interactions between inmates. We hypothesized that either dogs would be a source and the centre of attention, thereby that dog may induce more dog-inmate interactions, or dogs would be social catalyst, i.e. facilitator of social interactions between humans. For that, we analysed first one-hour AAI sessions involving 10 adult male inmates, 7 service dogs and one dog handler. An observer recorded, using ethological methods, spatial distances between dogs and inmates and between humans, direction of inmates’ gazes and their vocal behaviour. Hypothesis that dogs could be social catalyst was not supported: each inmate interacted mainly with his own dog. Own dog was the almost only exclusive partner with whom they communicated: target of their visual gazes, vocal production and physical contact. Based on literature and this preliminary research, we suggested that the animal/human ratio could be a crucial factor influencing the quality and quantity of AAI interactions.
狗在监狱动物辅助干预中引起注意:一项初步研究
动物辅助干预(AAI)似乎为防止囚犯的日常状况(过度拥挤或社会隔离)提供了有希望的可能性;然而,对于涉及的潜在过程或AAI对囚犯之间互动发展的影响,我们一无所知。我们假设狗可能是注意力的来源和中心,因此狗可能会引起更多的狗与囚犯的互动,或者狗可能是社会催化剂,即人类之间社会互动的促进者。为此,我们分析了第一次一小时的AAI会议,涉及10名成年男性囚犯,7只服务犬和一名训犬员。一名观察员用动物行为学方法记录了狗与囚犯之间以及人与人之间的空间距离、囚犯注视的方向和他们的声音行为。狗可以成为社会催化剂的假设不被支持:每个囚犯主要与他自己的狗互动。自己的狗几乎是他们唯一唯一的交流伙伴:他们的目光、声音和身体接触的目标。基于文献和本初步研究,我们认为动物/人的比例可能是影响人工智能互动质量和数量的关键因素。
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