Latest news with #facialexpressions


Telegraph
29-05-2025
- Health
- Telegraph
The expressions that reveal how a horse is feeling
There is more to horseplay than meets the eye, scientists have found after discovering a wide range of equine facial expressions and their meanings. A total of 22 facial behaviours were identified, falling into one of four categories – playing, friendly, alert or aggression. Scientists gathered videos of 36 horses at an equine centre in Winchester, Hampshire, and used a computer system to track precise muscle movements in the face. Each facial change was linked to specific muscle actions to allow for precise matching of behaviour to expression. When horses were in a jolly mood and playing around, they tended to open their mouths, the scientists found. This, they said, was similar to how carnivores and primates are agape when playing with a friend or family member, suggesting a universal origin of horseplay among mammals. Other telltale signs of playfulness were lots of eye white being visible, rotated and flattened ears, and a raised chin. In contrast, signs of agonistic behaviour that foreshadowed aggression were a lowered head, flared nostrils and raised eyebrows. When on alert, or in a high attentional state, horses had their ears facing forward and blinked more, often raising or lowering their heads to see or smell better. Friendliness was harder to identify, the scientists found, with neutral expressions often meaning the horse was in a good mood. Pushing noses forward was the only big indicator, according to the study. Dr Leanne Proops, the study's author and an associate professor in animal behaviour and welfare at the University of Portsmouth, said: 'This work is a game-changer for anyone working with horses. 'It gives us a new lens through which to view and interpret their behaviour, ultimately leading to better care and stronger human-animal relationships.' Horses have a more limited range of facial expressions than humans or dogs, the scientists wrote in their study, and as a result many facial movements are seen across different behaviours. 'Based on the systematic measurement of individual muscle movements, we have provided the first comprehensive ethogram showing that the domestic horse is capable of producing a wide range of distinct facial behaviours,' the scientists wrote. 'While this is a comprehensive ethogram of captive horses, the full range of horse facial behaviours is likely to be wider when we consider sexual interactions, male herding behaviours, adult-young interactions and rarer/lesser performed behavioural interactions.' Conventional wisdom in horse care has stated that if a horse has its ears forwards it is happy, and if they are back it is upset or in pain, but this study has challenged this. Its authors wrote: 'We therefore recommend that care is taken to not automatically attribute ears back or flattened to aggressive intent or pain.'


The Guardian
28-05-2025
- Health
- The Guardian
More than a long face: horses use ‘rich repertoire' of expressions to interact
They might get quizzed by bartenders about their long faces, but horses pull a variety of expressions when interacting with each other, researchers have found. While facial movements can help members of the same species communicate emotions or other signals to each other, they can also be important for inter-species understanding – such as helping humans glean insights into the experiences of domesticated animals. In horses, for example, ear movements have long been viewed as important indicators of their internal state. However the new work suggests there are many more signals to look out for. 'Horses produce a rich and complex repertoire of facial expressions, and we should not overlook the nuances in these if we want to truly understand the subjective experiences of horses,' said Dr Kate Lewis, first author of the research from the University of Portsmouth, adding the new work could also be important for improving the care and welfare of horses. Writing in the journal Peer J, Lewis and colleagues report how they drew on an existing directory of horse facial movements known as Equine Facial Action Coding System (EquiFACS) to unpick the combinations of facial expressions and behaviours made by 36 domestic horses during different types of naturally occurring interactions. These were classified by the team as friendly, playful, aggressive or attentional. The team analysed 72 hours of filmed observations to explore which facial movements tended to occur in each context. 'Something of this size has not been attempted before in horses, and it's really exciting to see the subtleties in how animals communicate with each other,' Lewis said. While the researchers found almost all facial movements occurred in all of the different contexts, some were more specific to certain types of interaction. In particular, they found during friendly, peaceful interactions with other horses, the animals tended to put their noses forward. By contrast, when paying attention to something, the horses' ears were typically forward and pulled together. During aggressive encounters the ears tended to be flattened and backward-facing, while the inner brows were raised, the nostrils dilated and the head lowered. However during play the lower lip was often depressed, the chin raised, lips parted, mouth stretched open wide, and the ears rotated and flattened backwards. In addition, the team noted that during play horses often had an increase in visible eye white, while the nose was pushed forward, and the head tended to be up or turned to the right, or both. 'These results really highlight the importance of not relying on just one aspect of the face, such as the ears, to understand what the horse is trying to communicate,' said Lewis. 'Instead we need to consider how the individual facial movements work together to create the overall facial expression.' Primates and some carnivores, such as bears, also open their mouths during play, Lewis added – with the movement used to indicate the interaction is not aggressive, thereby preventing unwanted fighting. 'This face has been anecdotally described in horses previously, but here we were able to show that it definitely exists and, crucially, that it involves the same muscles as it does in primates,' Lewis said, adding the similarity suggested that the 'play face' evolved in mammals earlier than previously thought, before horses and primates split on the evolutionary tree. 'There are both similarities and differences between the facial expressions made by non-human primates and horses, so if we are to gain a comprehensive understanding of facial expressions and their evolutionary origins, we need to look beyond our closely related primate cousins,' she said.