Should single-dog families get a second dog so they can keep each other company?
vote now: Yes or No - (view results)
Yes
While the correct answer may vary a lot depending on the personality of the dog and the characteristics
No
Even though dogs are pack animals, you don't need to get another dog to ward off his potential loneliness.
This may sound like an odd way of putting it, but dogs are sophisticated enough to suffer from mental illness. You may not usually
People have a tendency to believe that dogs no longer have an inherited instinct to catch prey. After all, they don't need to because
by Betty Carew
To deal with aggression in Husky dogs you first have to find out what triggers his aggression in order to assist him with the problem.
312 Article Titles on Dog Psychology
- Benefits of using anxiety wraps to help anxious dogs (2 articles)
- Do dogs choose the owner or do owners choose the dog? (5 articles)
- How to judge a dog's intelligence (5 articles)
- What all dogs want their owners to know (1 article)
- Easy ways to challenge your dog's mind (2 articles)
- How to safely satisfy your dog's predator instincts (1 article)
- Understanding the average attention span of a puppy (1 article)
- The most common attention-seeking behaviors of dogs (2 articles)
- How counter-conditioning changes a dog's emotional state (3 articles)
- Why some dog aggressive tendencies may be managed but never solved (1 article)
- How to introduce a new baby to your dog (2 articles)
- How to communicate with your dog (1 article)
- Mistakes people make in approaching dogs (2 articles)
- Why re-homing an aggressive dog is not recommended (5 articles)
- Dog behavior problems: veterinary behaviorist versus certified applied animal behaviorists (1 article)
- Why you shouldn't punish your dog for growling (1 article)
- Behavior to expect from a lab-shepherd mix (1 article)
- Signs your dog is unhappy (1 article)
- Dog psychology: An overview of the BAT methodology (1 article)
- Problem behaviors which are actually natural, instinctive dog behaviors (1 article)
- How to protect your dog against the stress of the holidays (1 article)
- Warning signs that a dog may bite (1 article)
- Warning signs that a dog may bite (1 article)
- Why dogs chew toys (5 articles)
- Tips for dealing with an aggressive dog (2 articles)
- Behaviors suggesting friendly interactions between dogs (1 article)
- How to reduce herding behaviors in dogs (1 article)
- Behaviors suggesting non-friendly interactions between dogs (1 article)
- How ear cropping and tail docking impairs dog to dog communication (1 article)
- Top 5 reasons people fail with Pit Bulls (2 articles)
- How dogs communicate their needs (3 articles)
- Why your dog licks your face (2 articles)
- Reasons for a dog to be destructive (1 article)
- Important developmental stages of puppies (1 article)
- The process of extinction in dog behavior modification (1 article)
- Differences between habituation and desensitization in dogs (1 article)
- Understanding extinction burst in dogs (1 article)
- Understanding how dogs learn (1 article)
- Common instinctive behaviors in dogs (3 articles)
- Dominant displays dogs use with humans (1 article)
- How to enforce calm behaviors in hyperactive dogs (2 articles)
- Signs a dog is stressed-out (1 article)
- Why yelling at dogs does not work (1 article)
- Submissive displays dogs use with humans (1 article)
- How to help a dog overcome its fear of men (1 article)
- Mechanisms behind how dogs detect fear in humans (1 article)
- The benefits of behavioral therapy for dogs suffering from anxiety and behavior problems (2 articles)
- Why dogs are more likely to bite young children (1 article)
- Causes of dogs barking from frustration and how to stop it (1 article)
- How to treat displacement aggression in dogs (1 article)


