Abnormal and Repetitive Behaviours Flashcards
Are the majority of behaviours complained about abnormal?
No - normal for the species but unacceptable to owners eg. urine spraying, aggression
BUT abnormal can occur - behaviours not part of the normal repertoire and have no adaptive value
What is a stereotypy? What are these similar to?
No obvious aim or function eg. horses weaving, zoo/farm animals repetitive locomotor behaviours
-“repetitive invariant behaviour patterns with no obvious goal or function
-often related to suboptimal husbandry
Similar to Compulsive disorder (=OCD in humans but avoiding issue of conscious obsession)
What is the accepted term for stereotypies/compulsive disorders? Who proposed this?
Garner 2006 - Abnormal Repetitive Behaviour (ARB)
Give some figures for prevalence of ARBs in cat and dog population with reference
Ontario Veterinary College Luescher 1998
3.5% dogs
6% cats
Give examples of ABNORMAL behaviours
May be locomotor or oral Circling Tail chasing Pacing Pouncing Chasing light points Staring at shadows Startle response suddenly Chewing feet Excessive licking FLy-snapping (often hallucinatory) Air or noise licking Flank sucking Hyperaesthesia Pica Polydipsia/phagia Sidden aggression at self or object Rhythmical vocalistion
In which breed is flank sucking predisposed?
Doberman
What are Staffordshire bull terriers predisposed to do?
Spinning
In which breeds is tail chasing predisposed?
GSD and australian cattle dogs
What are miniature shnauzers predisposed to do?
Check their hind end
What are border collies predisposed to?
Shadow chasing/light staring Running circular tracks Fly snapping (partial seizures in the visual cortex)
Can repetitive behaviours be down to seizures?
Maybe initially, but not continuously
What is the function os a stereotypy or ARB?
Lowering arousal
Coping mechanism - kennelled dogs showing stereotypies actually have lower levels of stress physiologically
- at start often only seen in high stress situations, gradually threshold lowers until become commonplace
What may occur if no behavioural solution is found by the animals to control the stress response?
Prolonged physiological stress -> changes in physiology and immunology -> FIC/IBS
How do these behaviours develop?
Start for a range of reasons
Reinforced as a strategy within a particular context
Occour in response to predictive cues
Then generalisation
What are possible causes or origin behaviours?
Developmental - behaviours occurring during brain development
Frustration - not being able to perform behaviours motivated to perform
Prolonged, inescapable or extreme stress
Situations of emotional conflict (Displacement behaviour)
Medical reason eg. licking wound
Reinforced externally