I don’t doubt that owners have an inaccurate view of their pets’ mental life, but I wouldn’t draw the line between human guilt and dog seeming-guilt too sharply. Specifically, the article says:
Where there was any change in the dogs’ expression, it was seen to be a subsequent reflection of the human’s emotions.
(correction—here’s a better quote:
If an owner thought the dog had misbehaved and then told the dog off, some dogs showed an “admonished” look, which humans then misunderstood as an admission of guilt.)
So, dogs show a guilty face, not in response to their own past actions, but in response to human reactions. But this is not entirely unlike how guilt works in humans. As you yourself observed:
guilt sometimes occurs even when a person has done nothing wrong.
Humans are perceptibly better than dogs at remembering what they did and planning what they’re going to do, and this aspect of guilt—awareness of what the dog had done—seems to be missing. But other aspects of guilt seem to be present.
If an owner thought the dog had misbehaved and then told the dog off, some dogs showed an “admonished” look, which humans then misunderstood as an admission of guilt.)
So, dogs show a guilty face, not in response to their own past actions, but in response to human reactions.
That isn’t what happens with dogs, at all! Whoever claimed this has never had a dog.
I’ve had a dog, and usually, the first clue you get that your dog has done something wrong is that your dog comes up to you, face downcast, ears and tail drooping, then gives you that big-eyed “I’m so sorry” pleading look. Before you have any clue that the dog has misbehaved.
There was no “misinterpreting” my dog’s guilty look, because it was binary. We often punished him by telling him to go stand in the closet for a short time. So if we came home, and he had done something he knew we’d be upset about, he’d greet us at the door, and then go open the closet door and walk into it. Hard to misinterpret.
On second look, the experiment does not look very compelling, specifically because the misdeed that being used may be too weak to trigger guilt even if the dog can feel guilt. The misdeed is this:
the dog had stolen and eaten a forbidden treat.
This trivial misdeed ranks pretty low on the list of things that I would find troubling. Higher up would be making a mess, higher still would be destroying something. I can understand why the experimenters might want to choose a trivial misdeed—they want to keep costs down.
As it happens I’ve read an alternative explanation of guilty behavior in dogs, which is that the dog is reacting not to a memory of having committed a misdeed, but to the presence of some situation (i.e. the aftermath of the misdeed) that the dog knows makes you upset, and that the dog would be acting equally guilty regardless of whether this aftermath was the product of the dog’s own behavior or not. Now I’ll be the first to say that this sounds almost like whoever came up with that theory is trying very hard to come up with any excuse to deny dogs a little bit of memory and self-awareness. But still, I thought I’d mention the theory.
As it happens I’ve read an alternative explanation of guilty behavior in dogs, which is that the dog is reacting not to a memory of having committed a misdeed, but to the presence of some situation (i.e. the aftermath of the misdeed) that the dog knows makes you upset, and that the dog would be acting equally guilty regardless of whether this aftermath was the product of the dog’s own behavior or not.
As Yvain pointed out in the main post, the same thing also applies to humans.
I don’t doubt that owners have an inaccurate view of their pets’ mental life, but I wouldn’t draw the line between human guilt and dog seeming-guilt too sharply. Specifically, the article says:
(correction—here’s a better quote:
So, dogs show a guilty face, not in response to their own past actions, but in response to human reactions. But this is not entirely unlike how guilt works in humans. As you yourself observed:
Humans are perceptibly better than dogs at remembering what they did and planning what they’re going to do, and this aspect of guilt—awareness of what the dog had done—seems to be missing. But other aspects of guilt seem to be present.
That isn’t what happens with dogs, at all! Whoever claimed this has never had a dog.
I’ve had a dog, and usually, the first clue you get that your dog has done something wrong is that your dog comes up to you, face downcast, ears and tail drooping, then gives you that big-eyed “I’m so sorry” pleading look. Before you have any clue that the dog has misbehaved.
There was no “misinterpreting” my dog’s guilty look, because it was binary. We often punished him by telling him to go stand in the closet for a short time. So if we came home, and he had done something he knew we’d be upset about, he’d greet us at the door, and then go open the closet door and walk into it. Hard to misinterpret.
On second look, the experiment does not look very compelling, specifically because the misdeed that being used may be too weak to trigger guilt even if the dog can feel guilt. The misdeed is this:
This trivial misdeed ranks pretty low on the list of things that I would find troubling. Higher up would be making a mess, higher still would be destroying something. I can understand why the experimenters might want to choose a trivial misdeed—they want to keep costs down.
As it happens I’ve read an alternative explanation of guilty behavior in dogs, which is that the dog is reacting not to a memory of having committed a misdeed, but to the presence of some situation (i.e. the aftermath of the misdeed) that the dog knows makes you upset, and that the dog would be acting equally guilty regardless of whether this aftermath was the product of the dog’s own behavior or not. Now I’ll be the first to say that this sounds almost like whoever came up with that theory is trying very hard to come up with any excuse to deny dogs a little bit of memory and self-awareness. But still, I thought I’d mention the theory.
As Yvain pointed out in the main post, the same thing also applies to humans.