4.7 Article

Integrative Model of Human-Animal Interactions: A One Health-One Welfare Systemic Approach to Studying HAI

期刊

FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2022.656833

关键词

human-animal interactions (HAI); affects; behavior; emotions; affective neuroscience; animal welfare; primary emotional systems; feeling of safety

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The Integrative Model of Human-Animal Interactions (IMHAI) provides a framework for studying interspecies interactions and focuses on modeling the primary emotional processes involved. This model integrates inputs from neuroscience, psychology, and ethology to promote collaboration between professionals and researchers. Based on evidence from affective neuroscience, the model explores primary emotions shared between humans and animals and the role of safety perception in determining physiological states. The IMHAI aims to understand emotional affects during interspecies social interactions, including emotional transfer, embodied communication, and interactive emotional regulation, to generate new hypotheses and predictions on affective behavior and interspecies communication.
The Integrative Model of Human-Animal Interactions (IMHAI) described herewith provides a conceptual framework for the study of interspecies interactions and aims to model the primary emotional processes involved in human-animal interactions. This model was developed from theoretical inputs from three fundamental disciplines for understanding interspecies interactions: neuroscience, psychology and ethology, with the objective of providing a transdisciplinary approach on which field professionals and researchers can build and collaborate. Seminal works in affective neuroscience offer a common basis between humans and animals and, as such, can be applied to the study of interspecies interactions from a One Health-One Welfare perspective. On the one hand, Jaak Panksepp's research revealed that primary/basic emotions originate in the deep subcortical regions of the brain and are shared by all mammals, including humans. On the other hand, several works in the field of neuroscience show that the basic physiological state is largely determined by the perception of safety. Thus, emotional expression reflects the state of an individual's permanent adaptation to ever-changing environmental demands. Based on this evidence and over 5 years of action research using grounded theory, alternating between research and practice, the IMHAI proposes a systemic approach to the study of primary-process emotional affects during interspecies social interactions, through the processes of emotional transfer, embodied communication and interactive emotional regulation. IMHAI aims to generate new hypotheses and predictions on affective behavior and interspecies communication. Application of such a model should promote risk prevention and the establishment of positive links between humans and animals thereby contributing to their respective wellbeing.

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