dog psychology

Dog Psychology Books Section


 

Dog Psychology Books Navigation


|

Dogs Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Dog Psychology Center Of Los Angeles |
Dog Psychology Center |
Dog Psychology Behavior Videos |
Cesar Millan S Dog Psychology |
Dog Psychology Behavior Videos |
Psychology And Dog Experiment |
Pavlow Dog Psychology |
Dog Psychology Behavior Shadows |
Dog Psychology Shadows |
Dog Psychology Playing Toys |
Psychology Website Dog |
Dog Psychology Playing Toys |
Dog Owners Psychology |
Dog Psychology Shadows |
Sled Dog Psychology |

List of dog-psychology Articles

Dog Psychology Books Best seller

Dog Obedience Trainig
Buy it Now!



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on dog-psychology
Email:
First Name:



Main Dog Psychology Books sponsors


 

Latest Dog Psychology Books link added

Ethiccash.com, Provider of great Adsense sitesINSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Dog Psychology Books!



Dog Psychology; The Basis of Dog Training,
Dog Psychology; The Basis of Dog Training,
by Leon F. Whitney
Used from: $44.97

The Dog's Mind: Understanding Your Dog's Behavior (Howell Reference Books)
The Dog's Mind: Understanding Your Dog's Behavior (Howell Reference Books)
by Bruce Fogle
Our Price: $12.89
Used from: $5.89

Dog Body, Dog Mind: Exploring Canine Consciousness and Total Well-Being
Dog Body, Dog Mind: Exploring Canine Consciousness and Total Well-Being
by Michael W. Fox
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $4.99

The Dog Who Loved Too Much: Tales, Treatments and the Psychology of Dogs
The Dog Who Loved Too Much: Tales, Treatments and the Psychology of Dogs
by Nicholas Dodman
Our Price: $10.88
Used from: $0.01

Think Dog: An Owner's Guide to Canine Psychology
Think Dog: An Owner's Guide to Canine Psychology
by John Fisher
Used from: $3.50

For the Love of a Dog: Understanding Emotion in You and Your Best Friend
For the Love of a Dog: Understanding Emotion in You and Your Best Friend
by Patricia B. McConnell
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $8.99

Be the Pack Leader: Use Cesar's Way to Transform Your Dog . . . and Your Life
Be the Pack Leader: Use Cesar's Way to Transform Your Dog . . . and Your Life
by Cesar Millan Melissa Jo Peltier
Our Price: $9.99
Used from: $9.99

Welcome to dog psychology

 

Dog Psychology Books Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Dog Psychology Books. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

How Dogs Use Their Tails As Signals & Gestures: Part 1

from:

In addition to barking, dogs also use their bodies to communicate about social and emotional matters. A dog's tail, eyes, ears, and mouth all speak to us, and whole body postures add further information, serving to modify the message given.

Tail wagging can come about simply as a sign of excitement, the degree of which is indicated by the vigor or speed of the wag. In judging excitement, you should attend to the speed of wagging independent of the size of the actual movement. A sporting dog with a full,
flowing tail might seem to move it much more than a terrier moves its carrot-shaped tail (where a furious wag may seem like nothing more than a tremor). Yet in both cases, high-speed movements simply mean "I'm excited." The relative size of any single dog's tail wag does convey other information, however.

Tail wagging is a completely social gesture. In some ways, it serves the same functions as a human smile. Humans seem to reserve most of their smiles for when somebody is around to see them or when they are thinking about somebody or something special. For dogs, the tail wag seems to have the same properties. A dog will wag its tail for a person or another dog. It may wag its tail for a cat, a horse, or a mouse. But when a dog is by itself, it will not wag its tail to anything it perceives as lifeless.

A dog will wag its tail to express its gratitude to you as you put its food bowl down, but should the dog walk into the room and find the bowl full, it will approach and eat the food just as happily, but with no tail wagging other than, perhaps, a slight excitement tremor. This is one indication that tail wagging is meant as communication or language. In the same way we don't talk to walls, dogs do not wag their tails to things that are not apparently alive and socially responsive.

For most breeds of dog, the tail will tend to lighten toward the tip, and on many breeds there is a characteristic white tip to the tail. It is also quite visible in jackals, foxes, wild dogs, and dingoes. Some evolutionary biologists have suggested that the purpose of this light area is to make tail signals more visible. For some wolves, the tail is marked with a dark tip, which, of course, can serve much the same function of making it easier to see the tail position and motion.


Other Dog Psychology Books related Articles

Dogs & Myopia (nearsightedness)
How Dogs Use Their Tails As Signals & Gestures Part 1
10 Dog Barking Moments & What Your Dog Is Trying To Say
Understanding Why Dogs Roll Around In The Dirtiest Of Things
More Dog Sounds And What They Mean

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE

This space can be enabled / disabled from your admin panel!

Dog Psychology Books Specific links

Dog Psychology Books News

No relevant info was found on this topic.