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  How do dogs respond to changes in cortisol levels in conspecifics and humans?


   Bristol Veterinary School

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  Dr N Rooney  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

The project:

This project aims to understand whether and how dogs detect changes in cortisol levels in dogs and humans. This phenomenon may have evolved because of the selective advantage an animal has, if it can avoid danger detected by other animals, in addition to its own perception. However, this ability has potential welfare and training implications - charities have started to train dogs to alert patients living with Addison’s disease, a condition resulting in low cortisol levels, to the onset of an adrenal crisis.

Working with a world-leading charity, this project will take a multidisciplinary approach to quantify the performance of Addison alert dogs and assess the emotional contagion effect(s) of conspecific and interspecific stress. Using sweat samples we will assess sensitivity and specificity of response and use mass-spectrometry to identify critical compounds that trigger alerting behaviour. Using tests of trainability and affective state, developed and validated at University of Bristol, we will also explore the effect of presenting naive dogs with urine samples from humans and dogs collected at times of naturally occurring stress.

The project therefore has the potential to improve understanding of emotional contagion and signaling and the welfare and working ability of dogs.

The student will have the unique opportunity to join a strong cross-institutional, multidisciplinary collaboration. They will be primarily based at the world-renowned Animal Welfare and Behaviour Group at Bristol Veterinary School and will also work in Dr Muller’s laboratory at the Cardiff School of Biosciences to learn methods of collection, analysis, interpretation and evaluation of volatile organic compounds, as used in vertebrate chemical ecology. A placement with Medical Detection Dogs, a world leader in training dogs for medical alert and bio-detection will complement the training. The student will gain skills across disciplines in behavioural observation, measuring working dog performance and welfare, scent analysis, data processing and evaluation.

This studentship will start in September 2019.

How to apply:
This studentship is part of the BBSRC SWBio Doctoral Training Partnership (https://www.swbio.ac.uk/). For UK and EU students satisfying the eligibility criteria (https://www.swbio.ac.uk/programme/eligibility/), please apply directly at https://www.swbio.ac.uk/programme/projects-available/. For International students and others outside this eligibility criteria, we are keen to accept students onto the programme who are self-funded or will apply for a scholarship scheme such as the China Scholarship Council (http://www.bristol.ac.uk/fees-funding/awards/china-scholarship-council/) or those from other countries (see http://www.bristol.ac.uk/fees-funding/search/ for a list). In the first instance, please contact us if you intend to follow this path.

Candidate requirements:
A strong first degree or masters in a biological science, biological chemistry, psychology or veterinary science. Experience of laboratory work and/or an aptitude to learn new techniques such as mass spectrometry and strong quantitative analysis skills

Contacts: [Email Address Removed] 0117 9289469



Funding Notes

Funding: For eligible students, funding is available for full UK/EU tuition fees as well as a Doctoral Stipend matching the UK Research Council rate (e.g. £14,777 for 2018/19, updated each year) for 4 years. An enhanced stipend is available for eligible students with a recognised veterinary degree qualification (£22,456 per annum). Research training costs are included, as are additional funds to support conferences and a 3-month industrial internship.

Where will I study?