Science The most aggressive dog breeds named in new study

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Anyone who has had a small dog snapping at their feet will declare that the most dinky of pooches often are the most inclined to start a fight.

Now, a new study has found that smaller dogs are almost always more aggressive than their larger counterparts.

Miniature Poodles and Miniature Schnauzers top the list of most aggressive dogs in a new study, published in Scientific Reports.

Larger dogs including Labrador Retrievers, Golden Retrievers and Lapponian Herders were found to be the most docile.

Researchers from the University of Helsinki studied over 9,000 dogs to analyse aggressive behaviour, including growling, snapping and biting.

As well as breed, other factors which impacted aggression include fearfulness, age, the company of other members of the same species and the owner's previous experience of dogs.


Older dogs were more likely to be aggressive than younger, with scientists saying this could be because of the pain caused by health conditions, and male dogs were more likely to be aggressive than female. Smaller dogs within breeds were also found to be more ready to snap than larger counterparts.

"Understanding the factors underlying aggressive behaviour is important. In what kinds of circumstances does aggressive behaviour occur and what is the dog's motive for such behaviour? In normal family dogs, aggressive behaviour is often unwanted, while some dogs with official duties are expected to have the capacity for aggressiveness. At the same time, aggressiveness can be caused by welfare issues, such as chronic pain," explained doctoral researcher Salla Mikkola from the University of Helsinki.

The study investigated aggressiveness towards both dog owners and unfamiliar human beings. Dogs were classified as aggressive if they growled often and/or had attempted to snap at or bite a human at least occasionally in the situations described in the survey.

Although small dogs are more likely to be aggressive, the study found that the behaviour was less likely to be addressed by owners as they are not seen as a threat.

"Aggressive behaviour is a serious and common behaviour problem in domestic dogs," the study said.

"Aggressively behaving dogs can cause public concern by biting people and other pets, with medical or even lethal consequences for the victim."

They add: "The severity of aggressive behaviour varies from biting and snapping attacks that can even lead to the death of a victim to less severe, but more common growling and barking."

Prof Hannes Loi from the University of Helsinki added: "People who are considering getting a dog should familiarise themselves with the background and needs of the breed. As for breeders, they should also pay attention to the character of dam candidates, since both fearfulness and aggressive behaviour are inherited".

Rough collie

Miniature poodle

Miniature schnauzer

German shepherd

Spanish water dog

Lagotto

Chinese crested

German spitz mittel

Coton de Tulear

Wheaten Terrier

Pembroke Welsh Corgi

Cairn Terrier

Border Collie

Finnish Lapphund

Chihuahua

Smooth Collie

Jack Russell Terrier

Staffordshire Bull Terrier

Shetland Sheepdog

Lapponian Herder

Golden Retriever

Labrador Retriever
 
They forgot to include chow-chow and shar-pei in the study. Those breeds are just massive assholes. I'd trust a pitbull before I trusted a Chinese breed.
 
Miniature poodle? I can believe it. My mom had one growing up, nasty little thing. Surprised chihuahuas aren't higher, in my experience they're also pretty mean.

I'm surprised g sheps are that high too, though I guess theres a reason people like them as guard dogs. Plus they're popular so I'm sure there are tons of backyard breeders churning out shit quality puppies.
 
Is this like "daddy long legs" are the most poisonous spiders but can't penetrate human skin? Because any dog that I can kick in the face causing it to stay down doesn't count. No shitbulls on the list, go figure.
 
What about the trans poodle?

biden trans.png
 
Dogs were classified as aggressive if they growled often and/or had attempted to snap at or bite a human at least occasionally in the situations described in the survey.
So the actual amount of damage done to humans or other dogs/pets was not taken into account here, but growling was.

Stuff my dog used to growl at included thunder, the vacuum cleaner, horses on television (but not in person), and robins trespassing on the front lawn.
 
Staffordshire terrier means pit. Pit bull encompasses a shit ton of different breeds.
Depends where you are, it’s not used as an umbrella term in the U.K.

A Staffordshire BT is a type of bull terrier, sure, but it’s not a pit bull terrier (which we call an American PBT)
They're a gray area. If you saw one, you'd call it a pit but they are sometimes excluded from the category by dog taxonomists.
The biggest staff is the size of the smallest pit.

Not that it matters because everyone knows the best kind of BT is the English Bull Terrier


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If shitbulls aren't at the top of the list you know this shit is beyond pozzd. They're worse than the niggers of the dog breeds, like 7% make up 75% of all bites...
 
Obviously a study designed by someone who has never encountered a dog before.

If you want to check if a dog is aggressive, have it interact with a normal sized man, a woman, a small child, a huge dude, a negro, a mailman, someone on a bike.

Dogs are retarded, but they don't all lose it with the same stimuli.
 
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