An analysis of behavioral characteristics and enrollment year variability in 47,444 dogs entering the Dog Aging Project from 2020 to 2023

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2025-09-10

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Public Library of Science

Abstract

Understanding dog behavior, especially in the context of the human social environment, is critical to maintaining positive human-dog interactions and relationships. Furthermore, behavior can be an important indicator of health and welfare in companion dogs. Behavioral change can signal transitions in life stages, alert caretakers to potential illnesses or injuries, and is an important factor in understanding and measuring stress. In order to take advantage of behavioral change as a biomarker, however, we must first have a behavioral baseline to assess. Thus, using owner-reported data from dogs enrolled in the Dog Aging Project (DAP) from 2020-2023, our aim was to establish baseline behavioral measures for 47,444 dogs, with the goal of using these measures in future research investigating behavioral change in dogs and short- and long-term health outcomes. Given that the data collection period spanned the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown period and its immediate aftermath, a secondary aim of this study was to evaluate whether year of project entry impacted average reported behavior scores in dogs and to investigate additional variables that may influence observed differences. In our analyses of cohort baseline and year-over-year changes among four composite behavior domains - Fear, Attention/Excitability, Aggression, and Trainability - we find that time (year of enrollment) had the highest influence on Trainability, wherein dogs enrolled in all three years after 2020 (2021-2023) had lower average reported scores than dogs enrolled in 2020. Several other variables, including breed, life stage, sex, spay/neuter status, size, primary residence, and primary activities, have positive and negative statistical associations with mean behavioral scores in all four domains.

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DAP Consortium

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